Playing with prefelt

Playing with prefelt

In May this year, I wrote about about a vessel I’d made for an exhibition called ‘Edge’.  Although this hadn’t been the intention, the vessel gave me a sort of Japanese minimalism vibe, which was something I wanted to revisit.

Edge Vessel

The vessel fit the Edge brief in that I’d used a circular resist to create the shape but rather than cut the hole in the centre of the circle, I’d stood it on one edge, with the hole on the opposite edge.  I like this shape and want to explore it further.

The fibre I’d used was something I also want to come back to.  A beautiful fine carded merino and silk mix from World of Wool, it was time-consuming to lay out because of the short staple-length, but produced a lovely, light and velvety soft felt.

Before leaping into making something with so many variables of shape, surface design and fibre, I knew I needed to make some samples and decided to think first about the surface design.

I have no real knowledge of Japanese minimalist art and am not trying to replicate it, just play around with some of the simplicity of design and colours as inspiration.  I love problem-solving (or perhaps that’s problem-investigating) so was setting myself a bit of a challenge.

I’ve seen various images of beautiful Japanese brush work using black ink brush strokes and red circles on a white background and I wondered if I could create something like that in felt. The biggest challenge seemed to be how to wet felt black, red and white together while keeping the colours separate. Prefelt seemed to be one way to go so I made three different black prefelts to see which might look like black ink brush strokes.

Using commercial black merino prefelt, I cut a strip and felted it a little. I didn’t think this would work well as it’s the cut ends that move most into the surrounding fibres and this strip is basically all cut edges. Next, I tried lightly prefelting two other types of black merino wool: carded and tops, as if I was starting to make felt rope.

The tops and carded wool produced very similar-looking results and I confess, when I got to the making bit, I lost track of which was which. The advantage of these was that the fibres are mainly running along the length of the line rather than sticking out of the sides so there should be less migration into the white. I decided I’d use these rather than the commercial prefelt strip.

I then turned my attention to red circles.  I suspect carded wool might be best but I only have tops in red so that was what I used.  First, I just tried making a circle freehand.  I got about 2/3 of a circle and a raggedy bit.  On the plus side, there weren’t cut edges, so that should help minimise side-to-side fibre migration. On the minus side, the shape left a lot to be desired!  Needs further work.

Next, I made some red prefelt and cut a couple of circles out of it.  I thought this would work less well but I was interested to see how they compared with the freehand idea.

 

I was aiming for a very simple design, so played around arranging black strands and red circles in different combinations.

Now to actually make a sample.

My chosen layout

I used a rectangle of white silk and merino commercial prefelt for speed, and felted it together with three black strips and a red circle to see what happened.

Sample 1 completed

As you can see, the black didn’t migrate much on the long sides, though it did where I’d cut the shorter pieces (on the ends on the left side).  The lines did, however, crimp and move a bit – maybe I need to prefelt these a bit less on the length and definitely more on any cut ends.  Also, I must keep a better check on any movement as I felt.

The red, on the other hand, probably needed prefelting more as there was quite a lot of migration there.  Basically, far too many loose cut ends, so either felt the edges harder or go back to a different layout.

At this point, I wonder why the heck I’m doing this: the layout looks so much better than the felted piece.  Nevertheless, I decide to make a quick second sample before I finish for the day.

This time I used the freehand red circle with the raggedy edge. Somewhere in the dusty corners of my brain, I’d started to think about using resists to reveal the colours rather than just laying them on the surface.  I hadn’t actually developed this thought but just plonked a resist on top of the red felt and laid a second layer of the white over the whole of the piece.  I had some vague thoughts about the red incomplete circle looking a bit like a setting sun so placed it near the bottom and thought I could perhaps print some flying bird silhouettes on the upper part afterwards.

OK, I’m sort of freewheeling by this stage.

 

The useful learning from my experiments thus far was that the freehand circle (which has fibres running around the circumference of the circle, therefore avoiding lots of ends sticking out) works much better.  You can see this very clearly from the under side.  The cut ends clearly also migrate much more up and down as well as side to side. The freehand shape was probably also felted a bit harder than the red prefelt sheet.

 

For my final two test pieces, I lightly needle-felted some red circles then wet-felted the edges to make them as neat as possible. I went back to using the original white carded 70:30 merino:silk mix and decided to concentrate on getting the red circle right.  I laid out two layers of fibre at right-angles to each other and put a needle felted circle top right.

The needle-felted circle felted in well and when it was dry I printed a tree onto it.  It’s a bit big but I’m going to make this into a birthday card for my Mum.

For my final test piece I continued with the carded merino & silk batt.  I laid four layers of fibre round a circular resist and added one needle-felted red circle on each side.

As with my earlier Edge vessel, I cut it on one of the edges (rather than in the centre of the circle) and designed it to sit on the opposite edge.

Part-way through fulling, I worried that one of the red circles hadn’t felted in very well so did a little judicious needle felting around its edges before finishing the vessel.

This is a lot smaller than my original ‘edge’ vessel and much sturdier.

Conclusions?

The needle-felted and freehand wet-felted circles work better than cutting the circles from prefelt. I like the effect though could maybe make the need-felted circles a bit thinner: they do look as if they’re partially sitting on top of the surface.  I’m happy that I’ve more or less cracked that bit of my challenge.  As for the black lines, I’m leaving them for now but may come back to them at a later stage. The carded merino / silk batt was lovely to work with and I will definitely be making more things using this fibre. I might make a series of vessels using different colours and / or numbers of circles. I may also develop combining a circle and a printed tree. As usual, each experiment opens up lots of new possibilities. So much felt to make and too little time…..

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

16 thoughts on “Playing with prefelt

  1. Lindsay – thank you. This is such an informative post that we can all learn from, and yes, I do agree with you about a thinner red circle to start with.

    What a lovely set of simple white/black/red layouts. The idea of printing a tree with a sunset is inspired and your mum will be so delighted with her card.

    Your vessels on the edge are definitely my cup of tea, I enjoy making similar and adding embroidery. I do have one question….with your final piece (the small vessel) you mentioned batt, but it looks like carded fibre in the photos….?

    From my point of view….please keep experimenting 🤪

    Xx

    1. Many thanks for your kind comments, Antje. I’m glad you found it interesting. It was fun playing with the layouts.

      You asked about the fibre. I double checked on the World of Wool website. It’s described as a ‘carded Merino / A grade mulberry silk batt’ so yes, both carded and a batt. Does that make sense?

  2. Yes Lindsay a very interesting post. That World of Wool merino silk does come out beautifully. I like your final pot. At first sight I assumed that you would make the cut diagonally opposite the red dot, that is tipping down the side rather than right above the foot. But then I remembered that there was a red dot on the other side of the pot too, so that probably wouldn’t have balanced visually. However, what you’ve done looks good, and I like the idea of adding a printed tree, or perhaps a deer (reindeer?) with snow on it’s horns? Christmas presents? (oops sorry the C word again!)
    Ann

  3. Thanks, Ann. I did think about where to make the cut on the vessel – always a tricky one. I decided I liked it best with both circles being non-central, if that makes sense. Following my earlier vessel, I hadn’t even thought about making it on the side. Something else to ponder……

  4. Your experiments are interesting, and well described, and we can all learn from them. The simple black and red Japanese style is lovely!

    Your printing technique is superb. What would a smaller circle, overprinted with the tree’s bottom right corner hugging it, look like? Sunrise/sunset?

    1. Thanks for your comments. It is apparently possible to print on colours other than white but I haven’t tried it. There’s a different paper for printing onto dark colours. I do have some of the dark transfer paper but have never got round to trying it. I doubt though that you can print on both dark and light colours with the same print.

      That picture actually looks better with a small strip of monochrome fabric across the bottom (like with my other printed tree pictures but a narrower fabric strip). I didn’t think of it beforehand but I might try it at some point. Then I could vary the position of the circle and maybe make it more sunset-like with yellow / orange felt.

  5. Interesting experiments Lindsay and I love the Japanese style of design. Your printed tree is so sharp and detailed. I know your aim is to felt the design but if I could achieve that quality in a print on felt I think I’d be happy printing the circles, and possibly the black lines too.

    1. Many thanks, Karen. I must admit, I hadn’t really thought of printing the circles or lines but it’s a good idea. I may try it.

      One of the difficult aspects of printing on felt is that it does occasionally go wrong and it’s really disappointing when you ruin a nice piece of felt with an unsuccessful print. It would be really annoying to make a nice vessel then spoil it, though as we know, felt is fairly forgiving and I suppose you could cut it out or needle felt over it. I’ll have a think.

  6. I’m just blown away by the clarity of your printing that it seemed like the best way to get that clean Japanese look. It would be a pity to see it go wrong on such a beautiful vessel but yes you could use that as an excuse to try another form of decoration🤗if it did happen. I’ve applied needle felted and stitched decoration to vessels I’ve made and been really happy with the results so I know you could turn it to your advantage.

  7. Wonderful experiments, I will have to reread this post when I am trying to make clear designs with prefelt. Otherwise, I will do my usual thing before I remember 😜 Usually I am in too much of a hurry.

    1. Thanks Ruth. Yes, it’s all about trying to get a specific result, isn’t it. Of course there are lots of times when you want the colours to migrate but it’s good to be able to control it when you want to

    1. Hi Webtapestry. Printing on felt was a course taught by Lindsey Tyson using a heat transfer process: printing the image onto heat transfer paper then using high heat & high pressure to transfer the image onto felt. I’m not sure if she’s still teaching it but it might be worth contacting her if you’re interested in finding out more.

  8. I immediately saw a Japanese influence, from your beautiful photos, before I read your post.
    I do love the clarity and beauty of the red, white and black.
    The printed tree is gorgeous, and I love the vessel. I love how white the felt has remained too.

    1. Thank you Marie. I enjoyed trying the Japanese-inspired look. I may well do that again. I can get a bit geeky about something like trying not to let the red run into the white, but geeky can be fun sometimes.

  9. Great experiments. I love the lines and circles. I wonder if some needle felting might not help with your black lines fuzzy ends too. Fold the cut end under and needle it down. I often think It would be a good idea to take a picture before felting and then make printed cards with the picture. They look so different before felting.

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