A Felt Landscape Class with Jan

A Felt Landscape Class with Jan

I keep wanting to take this class with Jan, but it always seems to get scheduled when I have a class the next day or when I am at the Farmers Market. I finally got to sign up. My class was scheduled before Jan’s. Then I got the dates for the Christmas markets. The hat class was planned for the day after the last market. It would have to move. I would still be exhausted the day after the market. I don’t want to do that to the students or myself. So now I am taking Jan’s class on Saturday and teaching Felt hats on Sunday. I am sure it will be fine. I got all ready for my class early in the week, so all I have to do is load the car on Sunday morning.

To start, Jan emailed us some pictures so we could choose what we wanted to make. There was one I really liked, but thought it needed something else. So I had a chat with Jan about that. She does say you are the God of your picture. And she never does what everyone else is doing when she takes my classes. I went searching on the internet to see if I could find what I wanted to add. I did not have much luck. Google thinks it knows what I want to look at even when it doesn’t match what I put in the search. I found out later that I should try the in cogneto mode to get better results. Jan sent me a couple of pictures, and I found what I wanted.

I picked the one on the top right, but wanted to add a small shed. I know you were expecting one of the ones with sheep, weren’t you?

At the workshop, Jan had lots of her work to show us, to help us understand what we were doing.

 

 

Jan gave us lots of information about different ways to work. She explained all the needles she had given us to try out. You can see them stuck in the orange noodle. She included different versions of our pictures to help us pick out the wool we needed.

Then we had to pick our wool. She had a lot of wool. The bags covered 3 6-foot tables. There were also several books on the table for us to look at. I have no picture of the books. We were all wanting to get stabbing. I will ask Jan to look at the landscape book she has that I haven’t looked at before.

On to working. I chose to do a rough outline of where things were by holding the thin felt over the picture on a window. It was fun and absorbing, so I didn’t take as many pictures as I should have.

My friend Judy took this picture of me working.

This was my neighbour, she was working on a musk ox picture.

And here is a shot down the tables, of others busy stabbing away.

After adding the fog, I put in a little shack.

As we neared the end of the day, I went to add another layer of trees in front of the fog, but I couldn’t get them right at all. I think I was done with trees for the day. So I added the snow in the foreground. I may add the grass with stitching.

So now it is a few days later, and looking at the pictures, I can see the fog needs to fade out more. And maybe not cover all the trees. I will remove the tree trunks and fix the shack door.  Taking a picture really shows you what you can’t see looking at it live. I am not sure where I will go with the trees. I think I swapped the picture I wanted with a darker one. I may bring the fog down and add a few trees in the mid-ground, maybe with some snow on them.  We will see. I will take it to guild socials and continue.

Jan included a large instruction manual for us( 32 pages) in case we want to do another picture and forget everything we were told (completely possible, there was a lot to learn).

I think we all need to pester Jan to make this an online class or a book.  She has so much of it already done.

13 thoughts on “A Felt Landscape Class with Jan

  1. Jan is a talented needle felter and you must all have learnt a lot in the class and it was amazing that you also got a 32 page manual to help you later at home.
    Looking forward to seeing how you progress with your picture – like the addition of the shed 🙂

  2. Oh yes, let’s get Jan to turn her class into an online tutorial. I really like all her sample pictures and would love to have a go at all of them. I would have chosen the storm at sea, at least as a first picture. I love the effects that you get in the sky and in the sea when there’s a storm going on.

    You have made a really good start with your picture Ann, it looks really quiet and calm.
    Ann

  3. Love how you have interpreted the picture and added the snow details to the shed. I look forward to seeing how your picture develops.

    You must have been delighted to finally enjoy Jan’s workshop and you will have been given so much information along the way as Jan is so generous with her experience. A 32 page manual to boot….ideal as we can’t always retain all the information in our little grey cells 🤪

    1. i want to make sure i send them home with notes since life can get in the way of having fun. you may not get to your next picture for a few months… so a good set of notes to refresh your memory is helpful. there were lots of photos and differerent options to try. Ann did a fabulous job. she was looking tierd by the end of the day, it is not just stabing but thinking before the stabbing so it is more tiering than expected.

  4. The needle felted pictures seem so meditative to do, and appears to be less stressful to take a break from if the need arises, or there is an emergency. I am looking forward to progress on your picture, and how you will work the foreground.

  5. You are right Anne. Jan is a phenomenal resource for needke felting. A compilation of her research as a book would be stellar. I have all her notes (and yours) in a binder.
    I use it frequently.

  6. This looks like a great class. It sounds like Jan has an online class almost ready. Keep poking her 😉

    I look forward to seeing your finished picture. I love the fogginess of the photo.

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