Watercolors in Nuno Felt

Watercolors in Nuno Felt

I have been continuing with my experiments with trying to create a “watercolor” effect in nuno felt. I decided to take a few of the pieces that were the least successful with the dye/paint application and add more. The first addition of “more” is with sheer fabrics.

Nuno felt landscape created with silk dyed flat on paper and then batched (fiber reactive dye).

This is the piece I decided to start with. It had lost a lot of its color and still looked like a landscape but I felt it could do with “more”.

Nuno felted dyed landscape with addition of torn tulle trees.

I started with adding in some torn tulle trees on the right hand side.

Nuno felted dyed landscape with addition of torn tulle trees and sheer green "hills".

Then I took some sheer green fabric and added it on the left to give a feel of hills in the background. Some of these steps might be hard to see as the fabric is very sheer but it’s the layering that achieves the final effect.

Nuno felted dyed landscape with addition of torn tulle trees and sheer green "hills" with additional green layer.

I then cut off the left edge of the green sheer and added it back into the “hill” area. This gives a bit of value change as you add further layers of sheer.

Nuno felted dyed landscape with sheer green "hills" and tulle trees switched to sheer purple/maroon trees.

After looking at the tulle trees as compared to the green sheer on the left, I decided to change the trees. Since the background was mainly yellow, I thought the addition of purple/maroon trees would give a neutralized tree color but still feel there was additional color added. That seemed better so I added in the shadows too. I added a bit of the purple/maroon on the left for a bit of foreground in front of the green hills.

Nuno felted dyed landscape with sheer green "hills", sheer purple/maroon trees and blue sheer for sky.

Next up was to try and change the “straight line” over the trees on the right. It felt too abrupt a change in color. So I added a couple of layers of light blue sheer over the trees and then a full piece of blue sheer over the entire piece.

Nuno felted dyed landscape with sheer green "hills", sheer purple/maroon trees and blue sheer for sky with added stitching in foreground.

The next step was looking over the piece to see anything else that stood out. I noticed that the green sheer I had on the left needed a little work. It felt too straight along the bottom and there was a weird kind of ‘flag’ in the middle of the hills. So I changed those and then began stitching. It’s hard to see but there is light yellow stitching in the foreground. That wasn’t meant to add a hard line, just to hold the blue fabric down and keep the smaller sheer pieces underneath in place. I did add a broken darker brown horizon line which you can see I have started on the left.

Nuno felted dyed landscape with sheer green "hills", sheer purple/maroon trees and blue sheer for sky. Adding stitching in sky.

I continued adding stitch to the horizon line as well as the sky. Again, in the sky, I didn’t want a hard line so I used a very light gray thread, not pure white that might “stick” out too much.

Nuno felted dyed landscape with sheer green "hills", sheer purple/maroon trees and blue sheer for sky. Stitching and trimming completed around edge to hold everything in place.

The final step was to make very small stitches all around the edges of the piece to hold everything in place. I am happy with the result, a bit more color but still an abstract, dreamy effect.

16 thoughts on “Watercolors in Nuno Felt

  1. And with that, another beautiful creation is born!

    I am always astonished by your creativity Ruth. You have such an eye for what will work.

    What are your plans for this piece?
    Helene

  2. Was it your intention Ruth that, although this picture is intended to be an abstract landscape, it should basically be a “waterscape”? I do hope it is, because, try as I might, I can only see what looks like some of the flooded areas we have over here at the moment. Perhaps I have water on the brain, we’ve so much of it around here that I wouldn’t be surprised. 💦🤭
    Whatever, what I do see I like very much and I’d buy it if I saw it in a gallery.
    More power to your elbow.
    Ann

  3. It’s beautiful – soft colours and so peaceful. Is it headed for the framer then on to the gallery?

  4. You’ve done a great job of gently manipulating the felt to achieve a most effective but subtle landscape. I particularly like that you don’t give up on things that don’t work as you intended but persist to create something lovely from them

    1. Thanks Lindsay, I think it’s important to share the entire process. Most of the time, I try multiple things and there are steps that just don’t work. I hope it helps readers to realize that you just have to keep going and trying new ideas until you get an outcome that works for you. Nothing is ever perfect especially on the first try. 😁

  5. Ruth your piece is so gentle on the eye and I find I can get quite lost in the felted water colour landscape.

    Seeing your progress through the ups and down of your new experiments has been fascinating. You have such an eye for colour and the use of those fabrics to achieve the desired textural and implied elements is enlightening to us all.

    If this was the least successful original coloured felt piece, I’m definitely looking forward to seeing your next ‘efforts’ 😀

    1. Thanks Antje, the use of sheer fabric really helped with the illusion of what I was trying for. I hope my next efforts live up to expectations! 🤞🏻

  6. I love the colours that you have on this piece. It is a really painterly work. I would have it on my wall any day!

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