Making a Shell

Making a Shell

After seeing Helene use some prefelt ribbon, I decided to give it a try too. I am thinking of differential shrinkage to get the shape of a shell.  I thought it might work well with a spider conch shell to make the ridges.

I got my ribbon from the Olive Sparrow in Toronto. She doesn’t have it on her Etsy, but if you contact her, she has it. You can, of course, make prefelt and cut strips. But this is a fast and easy way to get going.

I made a 2-part resist so there would be an overlap on one side.

I made the inside pink, then added strips of the prefelt ribbon.

I added some blue for the outside. Sorry for the really bad picture.

Then of course the was lots of rubbing. I am using a rubbing tool from Moose Hill. It has a nice weight, not too heavy like others I have tried. I like to start gently.  It does have a nice, wide handle, so it’s easy to hold and press down when that is what you want. Jan used my phone to take many of these pictures for me. She took about a dozen of this one, complaining that I was not smiling. Seems I do not smile when I am working.

Once it had shrunk a little, I cut out the resist and removed the non-spined side of the extra resist. If I left it, I think there would have been too much to curl inside for the middle of the shell. Then of course, fulling and shaping.

It wasn’t long into the fulling when I knew I had not used enough prefelt to get the differential shrinkage I wanted. I suppose I should have known better. But often that’s the way. You need to be reminded of what you already know.

Still, it didn’t turn out so bad

When I got home, I fulled the ridges in some and then clipped it all into shape to dry. As you can see, this made the base of the folded part pointy, and that remained after I took the clips off and let it spread out.

I wet just that part and fulled it back to round in a very short time. I had been anticipating a fight with it.  I had tried to shrink this part more before clipping it with no success. This just reminded me of how, sometimes,  it is easy to get more shrinkage after it has rested or dried and is rewet. I have no idea why that works, but it does.

After it was dry again, I was not happy with how the top with the points wanted to curl around instead of standing out, so I put a couple of invisible stitches at each end to hold it in position.

And finished. I like the finished shell, even if it didn’t go the way I planned.

I may give it another try over the summer, but as spring slowly arrives here( we had a little snow again the other day), I find I have lots of ideas and more energy to do things. I have things to make for the guild sale in the fall.

16 thoughts on “Making a Shell

  1. That was an interesting post Ann. I’m not sure I grasp the shape of your resist, or rather how you use the fold over bit. Have you put fibres on both sides of it or only on the “outside”. Also in the 4th picture, have you already put on the ribbon or is it to go over what looks like shiny resist? I think I may have already answered my own question, but I’ll keep quiet and see if I’m right.
    I do like your final results and what’s a few invisible stitches between friends?
    Ann

    1. Hi I did put fibres on both sides so everything got two layers of pink and two layers of blue. I cut off the opposite side of the spiky part after as I did not need it to make the middle so I could have skipped adding that wool. so I didn’t really need the extra resist part. I would make the middle smaller too. there is a lot of unnecessary felt rolled into the middle. the shiny is the thin plastic so the two sections wouldn’t stick together when folded flat. It’s funny how adding stitches feels like cheating.

  2. The finished shell is lovely – especially like the way the contrasting colours show on the inside – and adding the retaining stitches was a good idea 🙂
    Thank you for sharing your process photos.

    The Olive Sparrow Etsy shop is gorgeous but items cannot be delivered to the UK 🙁

    1. Thank you, I was happy with how clear the colours stayed. I thought they might both go a little purple. If your looking for the ribbon find your local DHG supplier. That’s were it comes form.

    2. Hi ladies,
      I had a quick look at the Etsy page and I think the lady is a stockist for DHG Italy so you may be able to find the stock. Helene x

  3. Ann, after Helene’s post using the ribbon, I too tried it and certainly did not have the success you had. I really like what you have done AND your persistence. Your shell is great!

    Your smile is gorgeous but I also like your determined concentrated look!

    Wouldn’t I love to have a fibre shop like the Olive Sparrow nearby to just browse through! Did not see her prefelt ribbon on her Etsy site. Oh well, we all know it would probably get here faster from DHG than USPS😂🤣!

    1. Thanks. When we are at demos I have to remember to look like I am having fun. I am having fun, I love doing demos. I think I will stack 2 or 3 if I make another shell, You have to send Monika at the Olive Sparrow a message if you want ribbon she hasn’t put it on her Etsy yet. She is a one woman show, she has to do it all. I don’t know if she is shipping to the US. I know several people that are not as the customs and duty stuff is to hard.

  4. Your shell turned out great even though things didn’t go as expected. I have found that differential shrinkage takes about 6-8 times thicker than the base to really get a good shape. I have not seen the pre felt ribbon but I have some extra pre felt so perhaps I will cut some strips.

    1. Thanks. even though it didn’t go as expected I am happy with it. the nice thing about the ribbon was that a machine had made nice straight, evenly spaced cuts for me. I will try some differential shrinkage again. Mostly I have done it with controlling how the fibre is laid out rather than the thickness of the felt.

  5. Hi Ann, your shell is g-o-r-g-e-o-u-s! Love it! Glad the post got the creative juices flowing. I used 2 layers in the main body plus 4 additional layers for the ribbon (that’s 2 layers per strip of ribbon). This concentration of fibre gave rise to a more extreme form of differential shrinkage. So it might mean that with 4 layers of the main fibre you might need to place 4 strips of the ribbon. It would be interesting to see the difference this might make. Having said that your shaping is fantastic and it really looks shell-like. Great to see you in a photo too – your ‘wing-lady (Jan)’ takes a great photo.
    Helene x

    1. Thanks Helene I will try it with more next time. It was still fun to make. I did have a couple of people ask what it was for. I said an experiment/example and to look interesting on the self. It’s funny how we recognize a painting as “just art” with no other purpose than looking nice on the wall but every thing else gets the what is it for question.

      Jan takes great pictures even with my phone. It was funny, she said she didn’t have pictures from the felting day but she remembered taking lots. Most of them were on the my phone. LOL

  6. I love the shell, lovely shape and the spiky edge is great. Great colour choice, it deserves pride of place on a display shelf.

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