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January 2025 a review of the Moose bag landscape.

January 2025 a review of the Moose bag landscape.

January is full of appointment this year. The first of the doctor visits was no fun, but I did get more done on my present moose bag.

You have seen my various moose(’s) in their partly 3-dishness.  The project bag I started with is made of the same medium weight canvas for each bag. When I was working just on the moose I used a 14” quilters hoop, (It’s like an embroidery hoop but much stronger). Since I was not working on the whole surface of the bag, the hoop encircled the moose and kept that part of the canvas tot to work on.

original Moose bag for sale in the OVWSG Studio. the moose bag is hanging in front of a library cabinet with a sign saying they cost $20.00 (Canadian) each.1.1) the bag with no embellishments

two of the previous moose only augmented bags (Glenn’s on Left, Mine on Right - it has a quilting hoop on the bag.) both bags are sitting on my walker. 1.2) two of the previous moose only augmented bags (Glenn’s on Left, Mine on Right)

I could not use the round hoop and have the full working area available while I am working on the background. Instead I selected one of my foam (like a pool noodle) garden kneeling pads. This is what I have been giving my picture felting students to work on. I also remind them to keep the plastic covering on to reduce wool pick up on the work surface. Once the plastic starts to detach, its time to put it in a large Zip-lock bag and possibly start on the other side of the foam pad.

2) Close up of bag with toggle holding the working surface (foam garden kneeling pad and bags of wool behind it) close up of toggle closeure2) Close up of bag with toggle holding the working surface (foam garden kneeling pad and bags of wool behind it)

If you are working on a larger bag or an oddly shaped bag, you might consider the pink ridged foam basement insolation. It is very loud in its ah…., ok it sound like it screams in displeasure at being stabled but this helps anyone who is overenthusiastic about impaling the wool into your backing fabric.

This project also emphasizes the rule of the vector the needle goes in is the same vector the needle comes out or you are buying more needle! no changing your directions from insertion to extraction!

Last rule, which is just an obvious tip. don’t leave needles in the front face of the bag. Inevitably the fabric will shift or you will knock your needle into something and it will again brake.

Its also important to look at the needle you are using, how many and how far up the needle are the barbs paced. This determines the working depth. Particularly with picture felting,  you only need to engage the fiber with the barb and move it into your ground, in this case the canvas. So the barb has to move past the canvas but does not need to keep going after that. The extra stabbing distance is unnecessary to embed the fiber and the extra work will fatigue you so you can’t keep having fun. <Pouty face>  we want more fun and less work!

In this case I want the wool to be securely attached to the canvas without damaging the canvas. I found the T38-333 (medium barb spacing) needles worked well at not being too fragile, while still small enough to not damage the canvas. Make a test patch on a piece of your ground fabric you may find you don’t like the T-38 and would prefer a T-36? Watch for breaking of the woven fabric you don’t want to weaken your project bag.  There are committal needles designed to work on ground fabrics but are not commonly available to us at the moment. Maybe in the future.

3.1)Diagram of the Doer brand Needle, I have been using to felt the bags. 3.1) the Doer brand Needle, I have been using to felt the bags.

3.2) I have been storing them in the kneeling pad, but should remove the needles from the aria I am about to work on. you can also see the puncture marks of the needle  in the working surface.3.2) I have been storing them in the kneeling pad, but should remove the needles from the aria I am about to work on. you can also see the puncture marks of the needle  in the working surface.

This is a project that will help you slow down. Speed stabbing, and deep stabbing will often lead to having to get a new needles. with needles getting more expensive this could be a good incentive to slow down and consider where you are going to stab next.  Think of this more like a silver (mettle) point drawing rather than a quick gesture drawing.  If you have not tried silver point drawing, you use a mettle stylus on a prepared (gessoed) ground. The line made by the stylist looks like a 2H pencil.  When you tip the picture on its side to catch the light, then it has a hint of gold silver or coper to the line, depending on your stylus. It was use to teach drawing in the renaissance, no messy ink spills. Lines cannot be erased,. Misplaced a line and the ground must be redone and you  start again. so each line is considered carefully before being adding. It make  for a slow carefully considered drawing. Working with canvas is a bit similar, but with needle brakeage rather than having to re-gesso!

The waiting room at the last doctor was not really conducive to having my photo reference out  to consider as I worked, so I guessed. I was laying in what I remembered, generally, and will correct with wisps of fiber like transparent water colour washes later. I didn’t take any pictures while working there,  since there were no photos signs in other parts of the hospital. Normally I do take photos to check my progress. You often see something in your photo that you didn’t see looking directly at you picture.

4) Moose bag landscape in progress working on trees with light coming through them.4) Moose bag landscape in progress working on trees with light coming through them.

I have been working in the upper right corner of the landscape adding tree in between the bits of light peeking through them.  I started by adding the light backgrounds and then have been adding the trees. I still have a lot of the deep shadow to work on. you can see the blank areas.

The size of the project bag allows me to have the working surface (holding extra needles) and multiple bags of fiber I had been using. I have one larger baggie of the green dark to light shades and a sandwich bag of yellow/peach shades and tints.

5.1) Various bits of green blends in one large baggie, and a smaller baggie of blends of yellows, to peaches.5.1) Various bits of green blends in one large baggie, and a smaller baggie of blends of yellows, to peaches.

5.2) I am mainly working from these two bags, but have the base colours in bags underneath them, in case I need to make more.5.2) I am mainly working from these two bags, but have the base colours in bags underneath them, in case I need to make more.

The majority of the fiber is coridale, but there is some unknown wool,  and I am sure a bit of white was blue faced leister.

I get a lot of curiosity about what the inside of the bag looks like with the wool attached. If the short fuzziness bothers you, or you are afraid it will catch on things in the bag,  I would suggest a cotton or if you want something more posh, maybe silk would be the lining for you? I think I will likely leave it and see how it wares.

6) The inside of the  needle felted bag, still in progress.6) The inside of the  needle felted bag, still in progress.

I still have to do a bit more felting on the front. It is not a flat as I would like. I was given the suggestion of gently wash it mild soap and adjitasion. I am leery to try that in case I shrink the bag and ripple the image.

My next doctor visit is chatting with an anestatist, I think I may be his first patent for the day, so I may not get to do much felting there. I will bring it just in case, it will reduce my stress levels I hope. If I don’t finish it before the 31st I will work on it during my recovery.

Have fun and keep felting, wet, dry, or damp!

a quick review before moving foreword hoping for a happy 2025

a quick review before moving foreword hoping for a happy 2025

As 2024 slips into memories, and the hopes of a better new year abound, I reflected on what I was working on last year so I may make plans for this one.  A few of my plans for early 2024 were rearranged, with an unexpected hospital trip followed by lots of rehab. So I was left with an army of chickadee armatures, and a rearranged workshop I still should sit down and tell you about.

close up of chickadee armature focusing on one foot with tiny tows1) Chickadee armature in progress

During Glenn’s time in the hospital, I worked on Moose project bags. They wound up being a great distraction and carried all the fibre I needed in the bag too!

2 moose project bags with needle felted moose in 3-D.2) Glenn’s and my moose bags

Next was the tapestry project of the back of the parliament buildings. I had square 16, which also travelled well to the continuing doctors’ visits.

adding the underdawing for a felt picture of the base of the parlement library3.1) Under drawing underway for the back of parliamentary library square #16

the finished square and image i was working from3.2) My finished square, ready to be assembled with the other squares.

I also created a chickadee picture with a limited pallet. This is a very well-fed winter chickadee!

framed felt picture of winter Chickadee on a banch4) 2-D Winter Chickadee I made while Glenn did rehab.

Next was off to one of the 2 local gaming conventions, this time at a curling club downtown. I worked on another 3-D chickadee and then moved on to a 3-D moose head.

5.1-5.2) Chickadee on felting mat wings poisoned to be attached.  Finished Chickadee with Bat on a stick supervising library work at the guild studio.

needle felted moose head, working on getting the nose shape correct5.3) starting to finalise the moose head noose shape.

I had come to the conclusion that I wanted to know more of the new Guild members but was having a terrible time with remembering names. So I started a series of Name tags in the hope of inspiring others to consider making their own too. I started with a train themed one for Glenn, which he could use at the guild or while he was gaming. I even wove a kumihimo lanyard for him.

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6.1-6.3) Glenn’s Name tag, adding a kumihimo lanyard, Trying it out at a guild social.

I was inspired by a photo of one of our guild members Summer holidays, so promptly felted her! I started on a name tag base but the size got away from me and it was a bit big for a name tag!

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7.1-7.3) Vicarious Vacation enjoyment!  It was a much better picture than a name tag.

About this time, Ann mentioned she had misplaced the name tag she had made for herself.  So I made her a new one, not mentioning I was making it for her, I kept asking her design questions. She even donated a bit of her handspun so I could add a name.

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8.1-8.3) Ann’s New name tag. She did find her old one as soon as I made this.

Ann asked me to join her in a project for the exhibition at the guild sale. She needed a dragon hand. With some consultation, I think I made a hand she was pleased with.

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9.1-9.2) The requested Dragon hand. Dragons obviously like sheep!

The second exhibition was at the Textile Museum in Almonte. I had been asked if the Mer’s might be available to participate. So I got busy finishing all but Miss Mer, who is still hiding somewhere in the house. She is going to be so disappointed she missed all the fun. Mrs. Mer got her red spots and hair. Shark Boy finally got his mohawk, and Mr. Mer got his pike spots! Miss Manta and Sharkette were both already complete. I hope they didn’t cause too much havoc at the Museum!

the Mer's at the Museum in Almonte10.1) the Mer’s at the Textile Museum in Almonte

Needle felted Mer people Mr Mer trying to get someone to play tennis with him

10.2) Mr Mer trying to get someone to play tennis with him, and Mrs Mer still admiring her hair.

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10.3-10.7) Most of the Mers and pets

I returned to the Moose bag theme, but this time I was working on the background and not the moose ground as it were.

needle felted landscape in progress around moose on project bag.11) Moose landscape in progress

My last project started in 2024 was my card exchange with Leonor, a Solstice Raven. I hope it has found a good spot in her felt collection. It must have used its wings to help move the package since it escaped just before the postal strike, and was particularly quick crossing the ocean! I really was planning for a smaller picture but kept getting distracted by creating the background!

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12.1-12.2) Solstice raven in progress and completed

Looking back on 2024, I have created a mix of both 2-ishD and 3-D projects. I can see I am avoiding getting wet. I am still having trouble keeping picture felting flat!!

For 2025 I hope to continue with name tags, another moose themed bag and find and finish Miss Mer….. I know you are good a hiding but I will find you!!!! I hope that maybe I can take my own vacation photos and felt them too.

Unfortunately, it’s my turn for Doctors’ appointments in January. Hopefully, they will not be too bad or as long as Glenn’s. Maybe I can do some felting as I recover! Better order more Wool!!!

Fish for Christmas

Fish for Christmas

I know you’re thinking, fish for Christmas? Don’t you raise turkeys? Why are you having fish? Well, we did have turkey and the traditional fixings. In this case, the fish was a present. When I asked my husband what he wanted for Christmas, he said fish.

In the last few years, he has taken to cooking, particularly new things. I appreciate this so much. I have been cooking dinner since I was 15, and I just do not want to do it any more. Anyway, his idea was he does not know how to cook fish and would like to figure it out. He thought if he got them as a present he would get on with doing that.  My thinking was, if I buy fish before Christmas, it will be in the fridge too long before he has a chance to cook it, what to do? I could just make a card, I owe you some fish fillets of your choice. How boring is that?

A couple of days before Christmas I decided to make him a fish.

I drew an image of a fish and traced it onto some fulled wool from an old wool coat.

Then fixed the nose. I didn’t want to needle that close to the edge. Having done that before I know it can distort things.

Then onto the felting. I did well with following the lines not remembering until after that the easy way to do it is to lay the wool across the line, felt the line and then fold it over to the correct side.

Fish Head
Tail

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I decided the front was a bit plain. I thought of adding gull lines but I didn’t want them to show on the skeliton side. Instead, I made a fin separately and added it, completely forgetting to take a picture. You can see the line from it in the first picture below. It was covered by a piece of the skeleton. I didn’t want the bone lines to show on the front so I used “invisible” thread to sew the skeleton down.  the felt Snakes are from scraps. when I cut open a reaist I always roll the cut of bit into a snake and then store them in a bag for later use. Then I carefully cut it out of the background.

And this is the finished fish.

He was thrilled with the fish. He loves hand/homemade gifts. So next week we will go pick out some fish.

This is my first post of 2025 so I will wish you all a Happy New Year! I hope you have a happy and healthy year.

 

Happy Holidays 2024

Happy Holidays 2024

Merry Christmas, Belated Happy Solstice, Happy Hanukkah, and all the other seasonal and religious festivities happening, around this time of year!

I fear it is now too late to finish off this year’s last minute presents, but Don’t Despair!!  Today Is the longest time you will have to start working on next year’s Gifts!!!

As the local weaving and spinning guild finishes its 75th year anniversary, you have seen many variations on a Moose project bag.  The canvas gave an interesting ground to work on. (i have been using the T38-333 to attach wool to canvas).  it has also been lots of fun to try out different ideas on a single theme. You have seen my various moose and my utter failure to keep them flat. They have made great presents to give and a couple to keep.  It has been fun to see other guild members ideas and embellishments too.

My last variation has left the moose alone (leaving the original black silhouette) this time focusing on what was not there, a back ground. I showed you the start of the bag on the Sunday of the Kanata Gaming (and Felting) Convention. https://feltingandfiberstudio.com/2024/11/15/kanata-board-gaming-and-felting-convention-2024/

I had brought it with me to Doctors appointments, this time, mine and not glens. I also optimistically took it in to work on at a Guild Socials, but kept working on the library.  At one social, it got compliments and was compared to the original.  I got a good shot of it.

comparisons of moose bags, both hanging in front of cabinets one on the left is not felted the one on the right has only the background worked on. it is not yet finished.1)Moose comparison

I am sure I will finish off with more doctors appointments (Drat), in 2025.

I hope everyone is having a fabulous holiday hopefully with fiber friends food and fun! i also hope that 2025 will be a year of inspiration and adventures in fiber and felting! Now i better let you get back to fun food family and friends!

Post Script:

OH NO its already Christmas and this didn’t post so I will add one more photo to show you the debris field on the bed this morning. See if you recognize my new friend and I am going back to read my new book shortly, then on to making the Mashed potatoes!

post christmass unrapping, stuffed fosle, tin of toffies, licorish alsorts, shortbread, and book on felting!
2) The pile of debris, hint look up pailleeanntologly of the Burgess Shale to find out who my new little friend is. (he or she will fit in with a Bellrog, an oni, an octopus, triceratops and an IKEA moose!)

Needle Felted Sheep Workshop.

Needle Felted Sheep Workshop.

It’s the time of year when thoughts turn to warm woolly sweaters( jumpers). So, where do they get all that wonderful wool in amazing colours? Why for colourful sheep of course.  Dyed in the wool as it were. And where do you get those? Well, you make them of course. They can really spruce up a manger scene for Christmas or you can add them to the scenery of your model railroad or add a pin and wear them.

I had 8 lovely ladies to make some cute little sheep. There should have been 9 but one couldn’t make it so her sister who was there paid her materials fee and took some supplies to her so she could make a sheep at home.

After this point, once the students arrive, I forget to take pictures.  We start with the legs. I show them how to make them with needle felting. It is long and tedious to make them dense enough to hold the sheep up. Then I show them how to make wet felted snakes to cut up for legs.  You can see a plastic bag on the table it has the sheep samples and all the snakes I made so they could have legs and move on the the rest of the sheep. they make bodies, heads, and ears and then they needle felt them all together. they usually look a little wonky at this point and everyone has a good laugh at them and worries there sheep will not look right.

Most of them look like they are on stilts at this point. It is better to start that way and then do some hoof trimming at the end, to get the length you want.

Next is the best part, giving them their colourful ( or natural) coats. we used Bluefaced Leicester curls. they are small nice curls.

As they have all their wool, their personalities emerge.

Everyone seems happy, I will need to find out if I had any comments on the evaluation forms. Fingers crossed there are no complaints. When you teach with our guild we have the student fill out an anonymous evaluation. It helps to head off problems before they really start and sometimes you get good ideas for your next class. Students pop them into an envelope and it’s sealed. Someone else opens it and has a look and you get the feedback later.

This is my last post for the year so I hope you all have a

Happy Holiday and a Fantastic New Year!

The Museum at Christmas

The Museum at Christmas

I have been volunteering in the shop attached to our local Museum for several years now.  I have to keep an eye on the Museum, welcome any visitors, dispense information (if I can) and serve in the shop.  Visitors are infrequent unfortunately and, because I get bored easily and can’t stand doing so, I tend to bring in something crafty to keep me occupied between times.  As I am using the Museum’s electricity to light and heat my work space, I feel that I should use the time to make something that could be sold in the shop to help to raise funds for the Sturminster Newton Heritage Trust which runs the Museum and also the town’s Water Mill, renting the latter from the Pitt Rivers Estate.

I have told you about the Mill before here and thought you might like to hear a little about the Museum and the things I have made (or attempted to make) over the years to sell in the shop.  Though first I must show you a chap who, a few years ago, came to visit the Mill with his mates from one of the local biker groups.

A small dog sitting on the back of a motorbike dressed in a leather jacket and wearing goggles
Biker Dog – So cool! I’ve forgotten what his name was, though it might have been Jack, but he certainly attracted a lot of attention from others visiting the mill at the time, and he lapped it up!

This is the building which the Museum Society, as it was then called, purchased from the Town Council in 2007.

An old thatched building

The building started life in the 1500s as a cottage.  In the early 1800s it came into the ownership of the then Lord Rivers and was occupied by a farmer/baker and then a well known clock maker (we have one of his grandfather clocks in the Museum).  After being sold in the mid 1800s it was occupied by an insurance agent and then an auctioneer, before becoming a sweet shop and restaurant as well as a home.

Infamously, before the Second World War, the restaurant was visited for a meal by Oswald Mosley, founder of the British Union of Fascists.

After the war the property was bought by a solicitor and eventually sold to the Town Council in 1996.  The Town Council occupied the building until 2007 when it was purchased by the then named Museum and Mill Society.

The Town Council moved into purpose built Council Chamber and offices, which are part of The Exchange building. The Exchange was built and opened in that year on the site of what had been the largest Calf Market in the country but which had closed some 10 years previously.  The Town has had a market/fair since 1219, having been granted a Charter by King Henry III, and we continue to have a (much reduced) market each Monday with stalls around the town.

The first of my donations which the Museum sold (eventually) were these two small felt pictures of the Mill.  They were my versions of photographs which Graham, my husband, had taken.

Then I had a go at crocheting snowflakes, which did sell quite well in the run up to one Christmas.  I seem to remember that I have shown you these before but I can’t find the link so here are some of them again.

crocheted snowflakes displayed on a swag of green and white tinsel
A few Snowflakes

The Museum Shop has a number of items to sell which sport images of the Mill, Museum and, in the case of tea towels, our mediæval bridge over the River Stour.  I did use one of the tea towels to make a Memo Board for sale, with the intention of making a series of these if they sold.  Unfortunately that was not to be, the Memo board I made is still hanging on the shop wall.  Though to be honest I’m not sorry that there’s no call for more of them because it took a lot longer to make and was a lot more complicated than I had anticipated, and I had actually made it in my workshop rather than in the Museum shop, so it didn’t really meet any of my criteria.

A memo board constructed from a blue and white tea towel printed with images of a water mill, a stone bridge and an old thatched building; crossed with blue ribbons.
The “one off” Tea Towel Memo Board.

In fact over the months I have come up with lots of different ideas for items for sale which haven’t worked:  Making books in boxes using unsold cards sporting very old photographs of Stur (as the locals call Sturminster Newton). Making Etuis, but I couldn’t work out how to get Mill, museum or bridge  images onto them; I would have had the same problem with making chatelaines with fabric covered thread cutters, scissors and needle books.  I did think of making pincushions to sit inside glass or ceramic pots or ornaments bought from charity shops but I couldn’t find a way to make sure the pincushions stayed inside them without using lots of glue, which I hate doing. I did try fabric paper weights and door stops, but obviously couldn’t use my sewing machine in the shop and hand stitching would have taken ages and probably wouldn’t have been strong enough to keep inside the grains of rice, which I was to use for the weights.

I was fast giving up on ideas for things to sell in the shop when my stint at trying to sell my scarves and fabric covered note/sketch books in 1855, our Artisans “Superstore”  https://www.1855sturminsternewton.co.uk/ came to an end.  I had not been able to sell much during the 6 months I’d allowed myself so the Museum Shop ended up with most of the unsold stock!

The covered books and the silk scarves aren’t on display at the moment due do lack of space.

I have at last found some things which I can make in the shop and which are going on sale in the runup to Christmas – I have become addicted to making Norwegian Gnomes.  Some people these days call them Gonks, but they are nothing like the Gonks that used to be around in the 70s.  Here’s one I made back then – it still sits on my landing windowsill.  I can’t bring myself to get rid of it.  It is made out of a hat which was left over after one of our WI jumble sales.  I stuffed it, putting in a scrap fabric base, and added eyes, ears, hands, feet and a tail, and have loved it ever since!

A gonk made from an old fur fabric hat with added eyes, ears, hands, feet and tail
My vintage Gonk

For the gnomes I used scrap fibres, mainly scoured but unprocessed merino, to make the basic shape and stitched large buttons on the bases to help keep them upright.  I stitched on noses, in most cases these were wooden beads, though there were a couple of needle felted noses.

Part built Gnomes in various early stages
Gnome “cores”

I covered the bodies in various unused fibres, mainly prefelts or carded batts which had become compressed in storage, or failed UFOs.  I added “hair” – some of the large stock of locks that I found in my stash (I’d forgotten that I’d got so much!) and added beards and moustaches from the same source.  Then I covered the pointy hats with more of the fibres used for the bodies.  A few of the Gnomes were female – plaits from scrap yarn rather than curly hair and facial fuzz.

I started off making Autumn Gnomes but soon ended up making Christmas ones.  There were quite a collection in the end as I was making them at home and at various workshops as well as in the Museum – I told you I was addicted!

Here’s what the Museum Shop looks like at the moment in it’s Christmas finery and with all the goodies currently for sale.

The Museum proper has 6 rooms housing various alternating displays which at the moment include:

Our famous writers/poets Thomas Hardy (he wrote The Return of the Native while living here); William Barnes (his dialect poetry is famous – you might remember the song Linden Lea – if you’re old enough!); and Robert Young (he also wrote dialect poetry under the nom de plume Rabin Hill).

A fascinating display on the history of weights and measures (for instance a cricket pitch measures 22 yards long, or a “Chain”.  I always wondered why a chain?  Now I understand, there was an actual metal chain used as we have one on display.)

We have the earliest map available of the Sturminster Newton and surrounding area dated 1783.

Swanskin  (as mentioned in the link at the beginning of this post)

The Hinton St Mary Roman Mosaic – this was part of the floor of a Roman villa found in the next village up the road from us, which is also the base of the Pitt Rivers Estate previously mentioned.  The mosaic was discovered in 1963 and unfortunately was removed and is now in the possession of The British Museum.  It was hoped that it could be returned to Dorset when the Dorchester Museum was enlarged but they won’t let us have it back!

As part of the Roman display there are a number of photographs showing what flora and fauna was introduced to this country by the Romans.  You’d be surprised what plants and animals they introduced that we now consider to be “native”.

Upstairs we have a new working model of Sturminster Newton Railway Station showing how it used to look before being closed in 1966.  Very few of the original buildings are still here.  That will be a permanent exhibit (hopefully!) whilst most of the others will change from time to time.

Certainly the Museum is well worth a visit at any time of the year.

 

Collaboration with Ann, Dragon Hand part 2

Collaboration with Ann, Dragon Hand part 2

Part 2

After getting through a very busy September, it was nice to have a 2 day break at the Kanata Gaming and Felting convention. Day one, Friday, I spent working on giving the claw more of a diamond theem. I already showed you the gaming side and a couple quick pics of the dragon hand in progress.  It was a nice spot to work. I alternated listening to the increasing parrils of the table playing Arkum Horror and an audio book.

getting ready to add details and dimond shapes 9.2 Kanata Games club Day 1 felting project

As I said before, I started by spinning a bit of short-stapled silk, then reducing the twist before felting it onto the hand. I started at the claw tips and worked both the dorsum and palmar sides. I used sewing pins to work out the diamond shapes. Working on a curved surface the diamonds got a bit odd in shape but most were diamondish at least.

using grey silk to outline diamond shapes on the hand9.3-9.4 adding diamonds to the hand

You can see I still have too much twist in the silk I spun, I will take more out shortly. The green thing is another extendable magnet, I only dropped a needle twice so it was helpful to have.

9.5 I had trouble with making diamonds flow around the edge of the webbing between his fingers.

9.6  I kept adjusting the pins to try to work out the layout of the diamond shapes.

9.71-9.72

9.8

9.9 not quite diamonds but an interesting scale pattern where the diamonds brake down.

I took a brake and worked on a few other projects as I wanted to get Ann’s opinion of the hand. She checked it out on October 21st before she got to work on the helm she was making. She said it looked like he was wearing fish net stockings.

Hummm…… OK, let me think about this, I had wondered about adding colour at one end to give a bit more demension.

I also had more jobs for the sale suddenly occur, so had to work on the hand between more computer work.

10.1-10.2

Its almost time for the exhibition so I better work faster.  I am adding shredded sari silk to one end of the diamonds.

At the sale there is always an exhibition, the theme changes and the size and even the location of the display changes yearly. This year was our Diamond (75th) anniversary of the Ottawa Guild. our original organizer Carl had problems at work going from a team of 3 to a team of 2 to a team of Carl who still had to do the work of 3 for the pay of 1. That just dosn’t seem fair. So he had to step down from  organizing the exhibit and we had Wendy step in at the last moment. She did a great job with a short lead time.

11.1-11.2

11.3

She did most of the assembly of the display on Friday night, with a bit shuffling she had a lovely display.

11.4

There were a couple of felted pieces in the exhibition that I thought  you might be most interested in.

12.1-12.2 Ann and Jan Collaboration Dragon hand in Helm with dimonds

#6 Ann McElroy and Jan Scott     Un-Named – we invite you to suggest a name,   Wet felt, Nuno Felt, Needle felt, Wool silk nylon polyester wire.

13.1-13.2 Molly’s Bracelet

#16 Molly Underhill       Diamond Eternity Bracelet,    Wet felting and bead work, Merino and silk, Glass Beads

After the Guild Sale weekend, Part of the Exhibition was hung  in the Gallery just outside of the Studio in Heartwood house (Ottawa).

14.1-14.2 the two main walls of the gallery

hand woven black purse with dimond shaped embelishments and mit with dimond pattern14.3) There is also the mitts and a small handwoven and embellished bag just around the corner.

Post script;

We decided we should have a photo shoot so you could see the collaboration a bit better.

First we took pictures of the assembled Helm, Hand and diamonds.

15.1-15.4 Photo shoot for the Helm, Hand and Diamonds

15.5-15.6 Attempted Cookie Thief

Afterwards, the Dragon hand seems to have discovered the last shortbread cookie, I think the Helm was taking note of the cookie too.   Can you see the frustration as the Dragon hand realizes I did not make a dragon mouth and stomach to go with it?  OH the Despair!!! Is Ann’s  helm getting closer, in case it can claim the cookie?

 

 

 

A Knights Helmet continued

A Knights Helmet continued

Last time I left you with the main part of the helmet drying.  I also made a nose piece and strapping.

It seems I did not take pictures as I thought I had. I guess I must just think about taking pictures and then when I am busy working it is completely out of my mind. Jan got one of me working. I was using a darker grey to create the look of rivets as I attached the strapping and nose guard. I look so serious.

We did get lots of shots of it finished.  And not so serious

Here are a couple on the hat stand in my studio

I am happy with the way it turned out.  I need to make it look like it lost a battle. I wet it down again and rolled it in a towel to get most of the water out. I scrunched it into a ball and then opened it again. I think it looks like a crumpled helmet.

So then it was off to the guild Sale and Exhibition. I think we put Jan’s part and my part together the morning we opened. I think we were both too busy on set-up night to even think about it. It is all a bit of a blur.

we did a little photo shoot after the sale too it is very hard to get a good shot into the inside of the helmet.

 

I have no idea what to do with it now. What do you do with your projects after the show?

A Christmas card swap, except Jan’s card is still with me

A Christmas card swap, except Jan’s card is still with me

Firstly, if you’re Jan and don’t want a spoiler about your card, stop reading immediately!

I think I’m jinxed. There, I said it. For last year’s seasonal card swap, I was paired with the lovely Hélène and the card I sent her was returned to me by Irish Customs, who didn’t deign my wares good enough to cross its country’s borders. This year, I am unable to send my finished card to Jan because Royal Mail says no (well, Canada post says no, they’re not accepting any mail until their strike is resolved).

If I take part in next year’s swap, you might want to avoid me as a partner…

This year I decided to take the notion of a postcard rather literally; I wanted something the size and look of one, and so decided to put my sewing machine to use.

Some pre-felt on top of a hessian stabbing mat, with sewn lines made to resemble a postcard

I cut some pre-felt almost to size and marked down the lines typical of a postcard using a heat-erasable pen. See the twisted red wool on the top left corner of the photo? At first I had the idea of felting the lines with it, until I realised it would take me forever and not look half as good as using the sewing machine. I changed tactics.

After sewing those lines I wrote down my seasons greetings. I was ambitious in what I wanted to say, as you’re about to see.

The beginnings of the writing on my wool Christmas card, where I wrote "Dear Jan, Happy..."

Using yarn, I worked with a felting needle and carefully started following the outlines of the words. I immediately realised my “handwriting” wasn’t going to be as small as I intended. Oops. If you look carefully at the picture above, you’ll see the next word I was meant to write was “holidays,” which is larger than the already felted “Happy.”

More words needle felted onto the wool, saying "Dear Jan, Happy Xmas! L xx"

Where did the word “holidays” go? Well, sometimes you have to pick your battles. Let’s pretend this was the plan all along, shall we?

And then, off to the decorating and making it a more seasonal card.

The almost-finished card with a 3D Christmas tree needle felted on the right

There was something missing in the background… so I did the foolish thing of working that part after having the foreground finished. However, I think it was worth it, but you can judge by yourselves.

The same felted card as before but the needle felted Christmas tree has a blue background also in wool felt

Much better, I hope you agree! I particularly like the detail of the present with the bow made from yarn.

Now it was time to cut the card to size and glue it to a real postcard (a blank one made from watercolour paper). I sadly don’t have a good enough photo of the card’s front, so you’ll just have to imagine the above image in the correct size and without the markers that I removed with a steam iron.

Here’s the back of the card:

The back of my card, made of paper. It has some drawn birds, a doodle of a cat in lieu of a stamp and some greetings to Jan

“I hope this card reaches you in time” was written before I knew Canada postal services were not only delaying deliveries but had altogether halted them. Sorry, Jan!

I will have this on its way to you as soon as possible.

(By the way, see the smudge under the flying bird? That wasn’t me being clumsy at all, no siree, that was completely on purpose and represents the movement and plight of the avian creature as it strives to reach its maximum potential. Cough cough…)

Seasons greetings, everyone! Thanks for reading.

 

Collaboration with Ann, Dragon Hand part 1

Collaboration with Ann, Dragon Hand part 1

Ann’s Dragon hand

I did say I was going to tell you about the dragon hand you may have noticed at least once in a recent post. So no travelogue today as we look back at what Ann got me working on for our Diamond exhibition celebrating our 75th anniversary. It would be part of the exhibition at the guild sale (which Coincided with the exhibition of guild work at the museum in Almonte). I know two shows at once, can be confusing.

During the summer, Ann asked if I could make a dragon hand for a project for the diamond exhibition.  We met at the guild social, I brought jute covered wire, its unlabeled but is either 14 or 12 gauge, and made an amateur for her.  She considered it, then asked if it could be a  bit bigger. Ok, on that! Mark 2 dragon hand was bigger and could thus hold more diamonds.  She deemed it worthy, so unlike Goldilocks, I got it right in 2 tries!

You have seen me playing with wire armatures before, so if you had questions or want more info on armatures and wire gages look back through the blog posts. What i want to show you today is something I haven’t seen anyone else try.  Ann’s Specification was dragon hand, with poses-able fingers, and claws, that could hold the diamonds Ann was making.

Early this year, April I think, I had been surfing around the internet, on the other side of the planet, and doing a bit of on-line-shopping. While looking for other things I spotted claw tips!!, well the seller did not realize they were selling claw tips, but I knew they were as soon as i spotted them! I ordered 100 in Bronze and 100 in gun-mettle (sort of a charcoal blue/ gray) then later, in October, I made another order of 100 silver.

You can buy a few of a stud, an assortment of various studs or a pack of 100 studs. I figured 5 toed dragon or 4 and a heal claw, with 4 legs per dragon and maybe tail or spine spikes. That would mean the minimum per dragon would be 20 claw tips and however many spiny or tail spikes.  I could probably get a maximum of 4 dragons per 100 spikes. I could not decide between the bronze or the Gunmettel black so, as i said, got them both.

1.1-1.3)  Aliexpress vender was Sunfordfashion Store

I was going to make some samples but by august Ann asked if I could make her a dragon hand. Ah ha! I have just the thing I want to try out!

3 plastic bags of 100 each studs 2.1) 3 bags of studs in Gun-mettle black, Bronze and silver

Lets have a  closer look at the claw tips. its mettle and made of two parts; a screw back and the talon, where the screw inserts.

3.1-3.3) Close up of stud and backing

Now that you have seen them don’t you just think they would make the most perfect claw tips?

Do you recognize what they were originally designed for? Let me give you a hint; punk jackets? Stud collars? Ok maybe not something everyone looks at and goes OOOH those are cool.  I never had a leather jacket with studs or a spike collar, but the jacket still sounds cool. Originally they were screwed through the leather (or Pleather) from the back.

The studs come in lots of shapes, sizes and colours. so this might make a useful option for other projects.

studs come in lots of shapes here are depicted quite a few of the options 4.1) Various available shapes for studs.

I should show you an example of the expected use of these lovely studs

example of studded jacket with a few diferent types of spikes.4.2) I think this was listed as an jacket available on etsy. I guess the shoulder spikes would keep your purse from falling off. (Added design feature?)

Now that you have seen what the expected use for the studs, i suspect you can already see where I was going with this. I made the armature so that each toe ended in a loop. let me see if I can find the a bit too small armature to show you. I think I saw it in the bedroom, I have no idea why it was there. No its likely off with Miss Mer somewhere else in the house now.

When I created the armature, i arranged a loop at the end of each toe. Through which I put the claw shaped stud. around the space between the screw and the claw, I wound floral wire.  I then wound the floral wier ends up the dragon finger to both keep the claw affixed and give the aluminum some added strength.

5.1-5.4 shows the claws inserted into the wire loop then used steel floral weir to keep it secure.

Its not the pettiest of armatures but it worked. If or when I do this again. I would add a drop of crazy glue and give it one more twist to tighten with a screwdriver.

Last online shopping with Ann, I tried World of Wool’s “Carded Core Wool Sliver”. The previous shopping spree had provide carding wast core wool. Its sort of clumps, that may have tried to escape the carder or maybe refused to leave? It works a charm after a quick few passes on the hand carders. (for that, I actually used the full size wool carders not the pet brushes.)

world of wool core carded roving.6.1 this is one of the two options from world of wool for core wool

The jute cover on the wire made it easy to warp fiber over the armature, well easier than a bare weir armature.

adding core wool from the ankle to the mid forarm.6.2 adding core wool from ankle to mid forarm

As I added fiber I considered joints, tendons  and tried to figure out the anatomical important bits for a dragon. Ann had oked 4 claws rather than my original 5 clawed idea.

adding core wool over toes, note jute rapped wieir alows for good adhesion of wool to covered wier.6.3 working wool down fingers

I started to create a webbing between the fingers to make up the palm.

6.4-6.6 adding the webbing between the toes

I had considered the need for a tendon for the heal claw and started to block it in.

6.7  adding tendon to back toe

I had been over at Elizabeth’s, helping her set up the first draft of the Guild workshop schedule. That done it was back to my messy computer desk. please ignore the messy desk, i do as long as i can.

6.8-6.9 adding more structure to the foot

i had a lot of fun adding more anatomical features.

7.1-7.2  adding more structure to the foot and ankle

I was pleased with the shape and covered the hand in black. No matter what colour diamonds Ann made, everything goes with black!

As I said earlier, someone else may have thought of studs as claws, and I just haven’t seen it. I hope this will spark an idea and send you careening off in some new and exciting wet or dry felting direction.

NOTE: my main suggestion is that next time, I think I would add a drop of crazy glue with the floral wire and screw. it should  keep the claw tips from any rotation (one tip has loosened a bit and rotates out of perfect alignment, but it hasn’t let go!)

Aug.19th social I took the claw in to get Ann’s Ok.

Ann and the dragon hand gently playing with one of the sheep8.1-8.2) Ann playing with the dragon hand

Dragon was showing interest in her sheep……  the shepherdess looks nerves but Dragon was very careful.

Ann asseses the dragon hand8.3)   08-19-2024 progress to this point shape is good, claws look grate, needs more detail than flat black.

she liked it, but wanted more detail.   Ok I can do that, but first I need to photograph the set up for the Guild show in Almonte (which you have already seen!) and there is still guild sale and library work to do, and I have to get the Mer’s ready for the Almonte show too. We will continue with the dragon hand next post.