How to Make a 3D Felt Star

How to Make a 3D Felt Star

I was surfing the web the other day and saw a video about making origami stars. Like this one.

 

I thought, I bet that shape would work with felt too. I can make a pentagon. I did this during our March break. The schools are closed for a week. iws going to do this at home but then thought what the heck it’s a small project and Monday is our socials at the guild. I knew Jan would be there early and so would some others. I packed some wet felting gear, resist and wool into a bag and headed in.

I cut 2 pentagons of different sizes to use for the stars. I am using this blue underlay that I don’t really like. It’s thinner and flimsy and it holds water. I thought it would be good for this project because I wasn’t planning on removing the resist, it would just stay inside bunched up.

I cut out the resist and covered it in wool. I moved the first sides off and did it again. I then flipped it over so I could wet the wool and wrap it around. I don’t know who else does this but I like to lay all the base wool out dry first and then put it back together. If you press and wiggle the dry wool even for something much larger like a hat then you can pick it up to move it and it will all stay stuck together.

I am using Mallard green wool for the base.

Because I was somewhere where I needed to be neat and not splash water all around I used a sponge to get up the extra water from wetting out. I usually don’t bother as my studio floor can get wet without causing a problem so enjoy this rare picture of me being neat.

Then I added some sari silk in the Wildflower colourway. It is mostly yellow with black and red bits. I grabbed a primarily yellow section for the star.

 

 

Then it was the usual rubbing and rolling and fulling until it was shrunk and feeling sturdy. I wasn’t expecting a lot of shrinkage because the wool staple was as long as the resist or longer with the small one. I think if you had some short fibre or cut this fibre in half you would get more shrinkage.

After rinsing and squeezing them as dry as possible I reshaped the pentagons and made the star shapes by pinching the corners and adding clothespins for them to dry.

 

These are the finished stars.

 

 

After they were dry, I decided to cut the bigger one and take the resist out. It held its shape of course. That got me thinking about how a larger one would make a good pillow. The other thing a larger version or one with short fibre would do is let you pull the points to make them longer. It wasn’t possible with these as I would be pulling on both ends of the same fibre.

so far I have had several suggestions on what they could be used for. the first I got was to make them thin, then put LED lights in them to make a hanging sting of lit stars. Another was to put cat nip in them ( I will credit Jan but there were several that suggested this). A teacher suggested that they would make great fidget toys when I leave the resist in, they squish but bounce back.  I am thinking they are also silent. I am sure that would be a big plus.

 

 

16 thoughts on “How to Make a 3D Felt Star

  1. What fun Ann. That was a great idea, and Thanks for that Link, especially as several others popped up, in the way that YouTube has, which might also be interesting.
    I’ve not thought about your way of covering resists by flatting the fibres, removing them and then using them as batts to layer on afterwards. I remember you posting about making dry prefelt some time ago and although I’ve used it for needle felting from time to time, it’s not occurred to me to use it in wet felting. At least I didn’t think I had, but writing this has reminded me about my “batch-making” of scarves. I used lay out the fibres/fabrics & bits on a long piece of tissue, fold the tissue over and then roll it up tightly. Sort of Time & Motion. I’d lay out all the scarves on one day and come back and wet felt them all at a later date.
    Anyway, I like your stars and the idea of putting lights into thin ones. You could make your own string of Christmas (🤐) star fairy lights. If they had sparkly stuff embellishments, they’d look good unlit too – 2 strings for the price of 1.
    Do keep surfing and coming up with these ideas, they’re great.
    Ann

    1. I always layout all the wool dry first. I don’t like laying over wet wool. I am not sure why. There are people that make writing paper size dry felts and stack them for later use. I think I would never have enough of the right colour made for what I wanted to do.
      They would look lovely on a light string on a tree or in the window.

  2. Here’s my ludicrous (and already mentioned in the zoom call) suggestion: make 365 of these (like a friend did to me but in paper, much less hassle!) and gift them to a friend to wish them a full year of good luck 😀

    (Now let me duck and hide before Ann throws something heavy at me…)

  3. These are great Ann! I think everyone’s suggestions are good and definitely they are multi purpose items 🙂 Short fiber merino would work really well with this small type project. You could also add some embroidery if you made ones with less embellishment and solid colors. So many possibilities…

  4. Such a great idea. I am definitely going to make some of these. Yours look wonderful Ann.

  5. Love these Ann.
    I can see a variety of them in different sizes & suspended at varying lengths to create a starry night effect.

  6. love them Ann. The tiny ones would make great ear rings. Big enough but light enough!

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