Felt Connect 2025

Felt Connect 2025

As I write, nearly a week has passed since the 18th Southern Hemisphere Felters’ Convergence drew to a close but that peculiar mix of exhaustion, elation and excitement I felt as I drove home still lingers. I’m buzzing with so many ideas and happy memories! 🙂

The Felters Convergence is usually (pandemics permitting) a biennial event organised by volunteers from Australia or New Zealand. It is an opportunity for antipodean felt-makers to gather and share their knowledge and ideas. This year it was held in the beautifully quaint and historic suburb of Parnell in Auckland, New Zealand.

Before we arrived we were invited to “bring your smile”, a common refrain for anyone attending a social event but this time there was a twist…. We were to arrive with a smile and leave with a smile…. a felted smile! 🙂

Christine Roxburgh and Jenny Forrester (our very talented and incredibly hard-working organisers) put together an amazing, fun-packed program over the 4 days we had together. At almost any given moment there were 3 to 4 different classes or talks taking place and if that wasn’t enough, there was a room full of traders selling all manner of fibres, fabrics and felting equipment and a fabulous felt exhibition to visit. They REALLY crammed a lot in to the 4 days!

A small selection of pieces in the exhibition:

As Christine explained at the opening dinner, the Felt Connect title was a nod to the underlying philosophy of Convergence where feltmakers from far and wide come together to not only share their knowledge and love of fibre arts but also where new connections and international friendships form.

We had just shy of 100 attendees, 30 of whom were visiting from Australia and one came all the way from the US! Our headline tutors were equally international with Nancy Ballesteros from Western Australia, Katia Mokeyeva from Vermont in the US and Jacqui Collins from New Zealand.

Nancy taught for 3 very full days, covering topics such as:

  • colour theory for fibre artists
  • making properly fulled but beautifully drape-able felt in the Art of Drape class
  • the saucily titled, “Hanky Panky” session where she suggested lots of different ways to incorporate silk hankies into your felt
  • the Natural Rhythms class where she shared how she uses Fibonacci’s design principles in conjunction with her colour theory lecture from day 1. This allowed us the perfect opportunity to put some of what we had learned from her colour theory talk into practice while exploring wet-wool layout techniques.

Our sessions with Katia were a technological leap forward for Convergence, having someone teach 100 felt-makers from a different continent was novel and gave us the chance to learn from an expert that most of us will never have the opportunity to meet in person.

An example of Katia’s “Sea Waves” technique from her website

Katia provided us with pre-recorded videos of her signature “Sea Waves” technique and answered our questions over a Zoom call. Jenny did an amazing job of bringing it all together and resolving the inevitable technical issues that required her to hold the speaker jack in the computer so the room full of keen students could hear Katia’s replies to their questions from half a world away.

After our online session with Katia we were set free to experiment with our new learnings in the main hall.

Jacqui provided 4 full days of teaching, her classes were so popular many of them were over-subscribed. She covered a wide range of topics including, how to:

  • felt a fedora style hat using alpaca fibre,
  • make a wet-felted necklace,
  • painting on silk
  • construct and hang 3D wall art

And of course then there was the army of more than 20 volunteer tutors who offered to share their knowledge, a technique or ideas on how to develop your own style in new directions. There really was something for everyone!

A raffle was held to raise seed money for Convergence 2027 and the prizes were drawn on the final day:

Photographer – Pip Sturgeon

The final gala dinner and fashion show was a hoot, with heartfelt closing speeches from Jenny and Christine followed by the very funny “Glitter Sisters” AKA Lynn Evans and Sharon Fergusson, who hosted the felt fashion show with more than 20 stunning creations paraded among the enthralled diners.

L to R: Lynn Evans, Jenny Forrester, Sharon Fergusson and Christine Roxburgh. Photographer – Flo de Ruiter
Just a few of the fabulous felted outfits on display in the fashion parade. Photographer – Margaret Joppa
Bernice Mitchell modelling one of the three outfits she presented during the parade. Photographer – Margaret Joppa

Attending a Felters Convergence has been on my bucket list since I first read about the 2015 event and 10 years later, I’m pleased to say, Felt Connect 2025 massively exceeded my very high expectations and was worth the 10 year wait! Now I am hooked and Adelaide 2027 can’t come around soon enough! 🙂

Thank you so much to everyone who attended, organised and / or volunteered at this event, you are all utterly marvellous!

13 thoughts on “Felt Connect 2025

  1. WOW Teri, even more do I now wish I could get to New Zealand. What a wonderful treat it would be to attend such an event. The nearest I’ve been to anything like that was the 2013 Summer School of the Association of Guilds of Weavers Spinners & Dyers in the UK. When you attend something like that you are within a bubble through which outside problems can rarely enter. Such wonders you have seen.
    My favourite “smile” was the face with glasses in the 4th picture. Whilst others made me smile, that one made me laugh out loud.
    Thanks so much for the show.
    Ann

    1. Thank you Ann, you are so right, this type of event is so focussed and intensive it does feel like you are inside a protective bubble. I know the “smile” you mean, I couldn’t stop looking at it, it’s so realistic!! 🙂

  2. The cat’s head is amazing and Bernice’s jacket (final photo) is beautiful. What a lot of varied talent on show 🙂 and a wonderful opportunity to spend 3 days wallowing in fibre.

    1. Yes, Yuri’s work is scarily realistic, if they were life-size I would be constantly doing double-takes thinking there was an animal in the room.
      Bernice is a prolific felt-maker, and very well known here in NZ. I don’t know how she finds the time to make so many items and they are all gorgeous!

  3. Wow that must have been so inspiring to attend! Lots of yummy things to look at and ideas to expand on. That cat head was amazing! Loved all the wearables too! Tesi

    1. Thank you Tesi, it was really inspiring, I’m buzzing with ideas but as usual, never enough time to bring them all to life 🙂

  4. Thanks for showing us so much fiber goodness. What a wonderful get together and it looks very well organized. I love all the smiles, felt art and wearables. Such a feast for the eyes.

  5. I had heard the word Convergence (in the felting context) a number of times byt never in my wildest dreams thought it would just so damn good Teri. You brought it to life for me. Thank you. I only wish I lived closer.
    Your two organizers are amazing to pull this off (and to engage (and trust) the technology in such a way. I can understand why you are still buzzing and I am delighted that you got to experience it.
    Love the smiles. That cow read did it for me.
    Helene x

  6. I’ve heard about total immersion to learn a language but never related to fibre. Your head must be buzzing with ideas.

    Well done to all the organisers, tutors and contributors….I just wish I lived closer.

    I too love the chuckling face in the 4th photo, it just triggers a mirroring chuckle when you look at it. Also the incredibly life like cat and the beautiful jacket by Bernice.

    Thank you for sharing a glimpse into such a spectacular event.

    1. That’s a perfect analogy Antje – total fibre immersion for 4 full days 🙂 Yuri’s needle felting is incredible, the cat was just one of a dozen pieces we got to see and coo over.

  7. Wow does that look like a lot of fun. Surrounded by so many talented and enthusiastic felters. I love the floor “pod” sculpture the best but all the others are fab too. I wouldn’t know what smile to take away at the end.

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