Calling Felt-Makers Near and Far: Help Us Create an Inspiring Installation of Felted Poppies

Calling Felt-Makers Near and Far: Help Us Create an Inspiring Installation of Felted Poppies

There are times when making with our hands feels especially meaningful. We would love it if you would like to join us in making this one of those times.

The Auckland Felters group is preparing an exhibition titled Deeply Felt, opening on 21 March and running through to 2 May at Nathan Homestead, Manurewa (Auckland), and we’re inviting felt-makers from around the world to help us create a collaborative installation of felted poppies. The exhibition will encompass ANZAC Day, making this shared work especially poignant. The poppy installation will be used to raise funds for the RSA (Returned Services Association).

Image by freepik

What is ANZAC Day?

ANZAC Day is commemorated each year on 25 April in New Zealand and Australia. It honours all those who have served and continue to serve in the armed forces, and remembers the lives lost through war and conflict. The day began as a remembrance of the ANZAC soldiers who landed at Gallipoli in 1915, and has since grown into a broader day of reflection, respect, and remembrance.

It is a quiet, reflective day — one that feels particularly fitting for an exhibition called Deeply Felt, where the act of making, remembering, and responding through fibre is central.

Why felted poppies?

The poppy is a powerful symbol of remembrance. Interpreted through felt — a material that embodies time, patience, and touch — each poppy becomes a small but heartfelt gesture. Individually they are modest but together they become something deeply moving.

Every contribution will be combined into a larger installation, creating an evocative expression of remembrance through hundreds of poppies, made by many hands.

Who can take part?

Anyone who loves working with fibre.
You don’t need to be a professional felt-maker — all abilities are all warmly welcomed. Each poppy will be unique, and that individuality is part of what will make the final piece so special.

What we’re looking for

  • Hand-felted poppies — wet felted, needle felted, nuno felted, or a combination (they do need to be felted please)
  • Poppies should be predominantly red and approxiately 10-15cm diameter

Please see our simple instructions and ideas for making felted poppies below to help guide you, but there’s plenty of room for personal expression.

How to take part

If you’d like to contribute, please:

  • Make one (or more!) felted poppies – the more the merrier!
  • They will need to be posted to Teri in New Zealand, to arrive by 10th February 2026

Because this is a volunteer-led, fundraising project, we are unfortunately not able to reimburse postage costs or return poppies. All contributions will become part of the installation, and any funds raised through the exhibition will go towards supporting the work of the RSA.

Do you know other feltmakers or belong to a crafting group? Please consider combining your poppies in one parcel to save on postage.

A shared act of making and remembering

This project is about connection — across borders, practices, and experiences — and about using our skills to contribute to something larger than ourselves. Each poppy is a small act of remembrance; together they will form a quiet but powerful presence within the Deeply Felt exhibition.

If you’d like to be involved, we would love to hear from you. Please contact Teri for details of where to send your poppies.

Auckland Felters thank you for considering adding your hands, your wool, and your care to this collaborative work.

How to make wet-felted poppies

If you prefer needle-felting, our resident needle-felter has prepared another set of instructions just for you! Please visit Sarah’s website here.

1 – Print this template on A4 or US Letter paper (tap on the printer icon), if you don’t have a printer a 20cm / 8″ diameter circle will also work.

2 – Lay your template under a sheet or clear plastic or bubblewrap then lay your fibres from the centre out:

3 – Lay out your fibres until you have completed the circle:

4 – Layout your second layer in concentric rings starting from the outside, you probably will not need to add any fibre in the middle as the fibres are already overlapping here from the first layer:

5 – Optional step – you can add some accent colours to a couple of petals, this may be a different shade of red or you can “finger blend” another colour with your main colour.

To “finger blend” two colours, lay a tuft of each colour on top of the other. Pinch at both ends and pull your hands apart.

Lay the pulled tufts on top of each other and keep repeating until you reach your desired level of blending

6 – Lay your accent colour on one or two petals:

7 – Wet out (you might want to remove your template first):

8 – Add a black centre and dots for stamens. These can be cut from prefelt if you have some scraps or the dots can be made by rolling a tiny amount of wool in the palm of your hand:

9 – Push any wispy fibres around the edge towards the middle:

10 – Felt your flower to the prefelt stage using your preferred method; rubbing, rolling, “sanding”, kneading etc. When you do the pinch test the fibres should be holding together:

11 – Full the outer petals – pinch the centre of your flower from the back so the petals point downwards then roll the petals between your hands. This step tightens the felt on the outside of the circle so it starts to form a cup shape:

12 – Make 6 cuts leaving at least 5cm / 2″ of uncut felt at the centre, if you used an accent colour try to cut either side of those petals. This is a good time to trim any pointy bits of felt on your petals too:

13 – Continue fulling the felt by rubbing and kneading it, stopping to stretch and shape the individual petals every 30-60 seconds:

14 – While you are shaping the petals try to overlap them so each one sits a little behind its neighbour:

15 – Rinse and dry in a towel before the final reshape. I let mine dry in a cup or glass so they keep a tighter bud shape.

This is the amount of shrinkage you can expect:

Wishing you a fibre-filled creative 2026!

With thanks to Clare and Margaret from Auckland Felters for initiating this collaborative installation and creating the template.

 

8 thoughts on “Calling Felt-Makers Near and Far: Help Us Create an Inspiring Installation of Felted Poppies

    1. Hi Carol, Thank you for your interest in this project. I’m not comfortable posting my address online but if you could contact me I will reply to your email with details of where to send your poppies and the information we would like you to include (your name and country where your poppies were made): https://www.teriberry.com/contact/
      Many thanks! Teri

    1. Thank you Jacqueline – I agree, Clare is very creative but has surpassed herself with this idea! 🙂
      You are correct, we are just looking to receive flowers with out the stems but if you wish to send poppies with a flexible stem that would be fine too ((I’m not sure if the stem will still be visible once the poppies are massed together though).
      Please drop me a line when you are ready to mail your poppies.

  1. This is a wonderful idea. I would like to know if there is any NZ Customs issue when package arrives? I know that in some countries there is an issue with animal wool items being imported? I am keen to take part in this, but there is no point in sending if NZ Customs will destroy our poppies on arrival. Thanks

    1. Hi Marie, that’s a good question, thank you for asking!
      You are correct, NZ biosecurity is very strict but we are allowed to import processed wool. Raw fleece would be destroyed at the border.

      By its nature wet-felt has been washed very thoroughly and I expect most of these poppies will be made from commercially dyed wool too so already super-clean and free of seeds and insects.

      When you come to fill in the customs form I would describe the contents as “felted poppies” and include the email you will receive the postage address from so customs can contact me if they have any queries.

      I receive a shipment of wool tops most months and the only time I ever had an issue was when my supplier listed some bamboo tops as just “bamboo” on the form and customs contacted me because they thought it might be live bamboo plants. I explained what it was and they released the shipment.

  2. What a wonderful idea Teri! I hope you get loads of poppies and it probably is a good idea to let others know what to put on their customs forms. I would hate for these to be held up at the border. Great little tutorial too 🙂

  3. Thank you Teri, I am glad that I asked, and I do not mean to offend you in any way with my query. I will do as you say. Thank you again.

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