Needle-felt Brooches and a Print Exhibition

Needle-felt Brooches and a Print Exhibition

Since my last blog in November I’ve been very busy, though not necessarily making felt. I did, however, have a week’s exhibition with two friends in a local gallery the second week in December, and this afternoon I’ve dropped off 12 pictures for an open-call print exhibition, so that’s what I’m going to talk about today. 

Sitting in the gallery, I had time to do a little needle felting – I generally prefer wet felting but needle felting is better suited to gallery-sitting.  My friend Lynzi (yep, same name but different spelling) asked if I’d make two small brooches for her to give to her mother for Christmas. Lynzi liked some earrings I’d made previously …..

….. so asked me to make a mussel shell and a starfish brooch. I’d not needle felted a brooch before but didn’t think it would be very different from an earring so I set about it.

The trickiest thing was that she wanted them very small: she suggested between 2 & 4 cm. The smallest mussel shell earrings I’ve ever made were about 5.5cm and the star fish – which was a one-off – was considerably larger.  I didn’t think 2cm was practical, not least of all because of the size of the pin needed to attach the brooches, so we agreed on approximately 4cm. The mussel shell was relatively straightforward.  For earrings I make them curved like shells. For a brooch, I just made the back solid rather than curved and was sure to felt it very firmly so I could sew the fastening pin securely onto it. 

I had to adapt the starfish design as the centre of the starfish – which had to conceal the brooch pin – had to be a larger part of the overall design than it was for the earring.  I started off using a small star-shaped cookie-cutter to help me get an even star shape.  I concentrated on working the length of the arms and the centre of the starfish, so that when I stopped using the cookie-cutter I could work into the sides of the arms to make it less like a star and more like a starfish.

Here are the end results.

Lynzi was delighted and I’m looking forward to hearing what her Mum thought.

Now here we are in 2026 and I’ve had to put in quite a lot of studio time this week to create work for a print exhibition. Another local gallery (The Horsebridge Community Arts Centre in Whitstable) had an open-call for a print exhibition. The only requirement was that pieces had to have some element of hand printing. I wondered if my felt pictures with a printed tree would meet the criteria so had a chat with the organiser.  She said ‘yes’ so I decided to enter some.  The deal is that you pay per piece for a framed, wall hung item and you can put up to 5 unframed items per wall piece into a browser.  The gallery takes 10% commission on sales of the framed pieces (which you’ve also paid to submit) and 35% commission on the unframed, browser pieces (which you haven’t paid to submit). I opted for 2 framed and 10 for the browser.

These were the framed pictures I already had

And two unframed pictures presented with a card back and mount. 

So, I just needed to make 8 more unframed pictures this week to fill my quota for the wall and browser.  That didn’t seem too unreasonable when I decided to do it, but it has felt a bit less sensible given the time I’ve had available. It’s also quite cold here (for England). My studio is in an old industrial building (it used to be a bottle capping factory for Shepherd Neame, the oldest brewery in the UK). It has very little heating, so I had to decamp to my house part way through the week when my hands just could not cope with any more freezing water.

The unframed pictures have a mount with an aperture of 20 x 20 cm (about 8 x 8 inches) so the felt is about 24 cm square.  I thought the best idea was to make 4 pictures in one sheet and cut them apart during the fulling process. By ‘best’ I mean most efficient while still being a size I could handle on my felting table. I drew myself a little sketch to help me decide where to put the silk

Option 1 would mean the nuno felted area was the same in all 4 pictures so it was an easy decision to go for option 2.

I spent quite a long time sifting through my embarrassingly large collection of second hand silk scarves to select the pieces I wanted to use. 

I was keen on a grey leopard print scarf with a white background but it had stripes of more and less dense silk running across it. I thought I should just check that the dense section would felt OK so I did a very scrappy little sample. If you’re wondering why I got so little shrinkage, the felted scrap started off considerably bigger than the non-felted one.

It’s not easy to see here – more visible on the finished picture – but the more dense stripes produced a little more ruching.

It all seemed to felt fine so above you can see the first batch part way through the fulling stage.

Below is the layout for the second batch of pictures

I put a stripe of second hand wool (usually tapestry wool) along the top of the silk section. For the brightly coloured marbled scarf I auditioned a few different colours (red, yellow, dark brown, green)

And went with the green

So, here is the first group of 4 pictures with their printed trees

And here’s the second group of 4

I took the photos very hastily today and not in very good light: they are not as grey as some of the images suggest.

I’ve presented them with a back board and white mount and dropped them off at the gallery this afternoon. The deadline for submissions is tomorrow so, that’s pretty good for me. I have marked ‘last minute’ tendencies.

I print the images with a heat press – the kind of thing you might use for printing and image on a t-shirt. As I was heating it up anyway, I pulled together some pieces of felt that were test pieces or offcuts, cut them into small pieces and printed on those too. I will make these into cards.

Well, that’s me for now. Wishing everyone a joyful, healthy and creative 2026.

18 thoughts on “Needle-felt Brooches and a Print Exhibition

  1. That’s great – really nice results and interesting to read your process. Thanks and I hope they sell

  2. Wonderful Lindsay. I do so love your printed pictures and lovely though the trees are I was really taken with the sheep and the cat. I spotted the sheep first then looked at the cat and it was a minute or two before I realised what it was – my first thought was a fallen over tree, but what could that black curve be? 🤔Then I blinked and the cat appeared. 🤭
    I needed to go back to the butterfly – on first sight it didn’t seem appropriate because by now the silk equates with land and that made the butterfly as big as a double decker bus. 😱 Having gone back I really appreciate it now.
    I hope you get some good sales.
    Ann

    1. Ha, ha, yes, I can see why you could see a giant cat and an even more giant butterfly. Fortunately the cards will be free-standing and people are unlikely to have seen all the work together, so probably won’t make the connection.

      I had to choose non-tree images for those as the white sections were too small for trees and the printing doesn’t work well on nuno felting. Having said that, this fabric is fine wool rather than silk so maybe I should try it. Both the cat and butterfly are from paintings done by my Mum so I have a particular fondness for them.

  3. Your needle felting skills are good – the beaded felt jewellery is beautiful.

    We really like all the new pictures but we were really wowed by the two landscapes at the top in the second group of 4 (the marbled fabric). They are gorgeous.

    Your cards should be a success – the mix of printing and felting is magical.

    1. Thanks for your comments. I feel my needle-felting skills are rather limited so I’m glad you thought they were up to the task.

      A lot of the impact of the pictures hangs on the fabrics and I agree that that marbled / feathered silk is really beautiful. I bought it in a charity shop (of course) and it has no labels so I’ve no idea where it was originally from or who made it. I’d say it’s hand done like marbled paper – with colours applied by laying it onto the surface of a liquid medium onto which coloured inks, dyes or paints have been dripped & mixed as you can see the colours sitting on the surface of one side if you look closely.

  4. Loving the brooches Lindsay and you did a great job of making them so small. If I’d been your client you could have gone as large as you like, in my world you can’t beat a huge statement brooch😁
    Your latest Nuno prints are beautiful too. The marbled fabric is particularly effective and your “scraps” look terrific. I’m sure they will fly out of the exhibition.

    1. Thank you, Karen. I completely agree about the size of brooches, and indeed jewellery in general: for me, the bigger the better. Apparently Lynzi’s mum prefers small and not blingy, which is fair enough. I agree too about that beautiful marbled silk scarf – I was almost reluctant to use it but then I asked myself what the heck I was saving it for…. and couldn’t think of a good answer.

  5. The brooches came out great and I hope the recipient appreciates the work involved. I’m not much into needle felting either and I rarely do it anymore. I love all the landscapes and envy you your selection of charity shop scarves. I somehow never find anything so delightful here. Best of luck with sales!

    1. Thank you, Ruth. I put the scarf selection down to a misspent middle age! Also, we do have a lot of charity shops here. They tend to be much smaller and more numerous than anywhere I’ve been in the US so it’s far easier to drop unwanted things off and pop into one for a few minutes look around on a regular basis here than in other places I’ve been to. There are 7 within a few minutes walk of my house and 5 the same distance from where I work. The ones in the US & Australia are huge and can be fantastic but visiting is more of a commitment.

  6. The jewellery tuned out great. Smaller is always harder. I love your trees. I think I like the marbled scarf ones the best this time. Probably because they are different. I have a question. why do you put them all on the left? Or is that a this time it just turned out that way thing?

    1. Thank you, Ann. The marbled ones are getting the votes so far. It’s a good question about the position of the trees. My only answer is that that’s where I like them! I just like the aesthetic. I also asked myself why I almost always make them square and it’s the same answer. When I saw the picture at the top of the blog I did think I should consider making some rectangular ones. I suspect the trees will still be on the left though.

  7. I love seeing your printed pictures, I never tire of seeing your trees, they are more lovely each time I see them. The cat and the sheep are just great.
    Beautiful work.

  8. Your beaded brooches are a tiny fiddly triumph. Kudos for managing their size.

    As always, I love your pictures but on this occasion I will separate from the crowd, and say my favourites of the ‘new’ bunch are the bottom pair of the second set of four.

    Your trees being on the left….I can’t 100% remember, but I think you are right handed, so your natural sweep is from btm left to top right. Therefore the tree occupies the ‘empty’ corner. I’m always fascinated in contemporary galleries looking at the direction of brush strokes.
    Now you are going to tell me you are left handed 🤪

    I wish you oodles of success and hope all your work flies to new homes.
    Xx

    1. Hi Antje. Thank you for your kind comments. The pictures you like best also use an unlabelled but clearly hand dyed scarf. I particularly like incorporating fabric dyed by another individual and sometimes invent a little back story for them. I’m happy to be giving new life to something that has been made with care but then discarded.

      You’re right that I’m right handed. I don’t know whether that influences my tree placement or not. I think of it more as a visual decision than a manually-led one but maybe there’s a link?

  9. You realy rose to the challenge with the jewellry Lindsay, I am sure your friend’s Mum loved them.

    I really like how you mix printing with felting. All the pieces are gorgeous and I wish you the best with the sales. The last two really caught my eye 😍

    The cards are a beautiful way for someone to get to own a piece of your artwork Lindsay, they would all look at home in frames.
    Helene

  10. Your landscapes are fascinating and I truly hope that they will sell well. I loved to follow your process to such a fantastic dreamy result. I am also genuinely interested in the mounting pieces on board for browser display, as my art group offers it as a cheaper additional option in exhibitions, and I have not taken this path yet, but of course it is an additional chance.

    I also loved your jewellery ideas and how you managed those lovely tiny needle felted brooches, a challenge! Adding those beads to the felt really makes a lot of difference, I really like it.

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