POLLY PUPPET or It’s Amazing What You Can Do With Empty Milk Bottles

POLLY PUPPET or It’s Amazing What You Can Do With Empty Milk Bottles

Back in November last year, I was asked by Tanya, the author of our upcoming pantomime, if I would make a parrot puppet for the show.  I was a bit surprised since the show was Cinderella and I wasn’t aware that there was a parrot in that panto.  But then, when I read the script I found that it had a camel in it too, so what was a parrot between friends?

I agreed to make the puppet and, having found the appropriate place in the script, I set about working out how it was to operate.

The scene was nearing the end of the panto when the comedy duo, Stanley Wright and Ivor Watt (you can imagine the “he’s right and what’s what” dialogue), were returning from their holiday in South America and had arrived at Compton Abbas Airfield in Dorset.  Upon being so requested by a customs officer Mr Watt placed their suitcase on the customs desk to be checked.  The customs officer proceeded to pull out of the case what appeared to be a dead parrot.  This parrot would, after having been banged on the desk (à la Monty Python sketch) and thrown back into the case, climb back out of the case, hiccupping the while.

It would be necessary for the puppeteer to be inside the desk so as to manipulate the parrot whilst assisting the customs officer to pull odd things out of the case like the vodka bottle the parrot had emptied, a washing line  (for shopping on line) sporting all sorts of odd bits of clothing; an old fashioned phone with ears eyes and a mouth ( a head phone);  a basket (for the on line shopping); a bag of apples (Apple Pay); a fish and two tins (a perch for the parrot and toucan as company for him); a credit card, and a teddy dressed in a PayPal tee-shirt, just in case the Apple Pay and the credit card weren’t enough to pay for the shopping; and an email invitation to the wedding of Cinderella to Prince Lee.

The puppeteer had to manage this while at the same time holding the drunken parrot high above his/her head so that it could be seen to be watching the action and hiccupping loudly from time to time.

This needed some thinking about.  Obviously it was necessary for the base of the case to be removed and for a similar sized hole to be cut in the top of the desk so that the various items could be handed up to the customs officer – that seemed straight forward.

The puppet would need to be at least life-size, and reasonably strong to withstand being bashed about. The scene was not a long one, but nonetheless a sufficiently substantial puppet might be so heavy that holding it up in the air would be painful.  The answer of course was two parrots.  One which could take the abuse, and one which was light and manoeuvrable and the beak on which could open and close.  To be able to manipulate the beak the puppeteer’s hand would need to be inside the parrot’s head, but since it would be way above the case on the desk the puppeteer’s arm would have to be inside the parrot’s body as well.

My thought was that the parrot could stand on the rim of the case and this should help the puppeteer hold the parrot up for the length of the scene.  I discussed this with the director of the panto and it was agreed that this would be the best option.  I also offered to be the puppeteer, mainly because it would be easier to fit the parrot to my arm if I was to “wear” it than to have to keep checking the fit with another person.

Unfortunately the customs desk and the suitcase were not available for me to work with – the desk not yet having been constructed and the suitcase not chosen, but I was anxious to get on with making the puppet because the cast members who would be in this scene would need to be able to rehearse with both the parrots.

The puppet would need to have legs and feet so it could stand on the edge of the case.  I could also have it “walk” along the edge of the case by having one of the legs more moveable than the other and attaching an operating stick to the foot.  I would then be able to make it side step along the case and back again.  I might also be able to mimic the parrot scratching it’s head with that foot.

I’d decided on a red macaw so I did a trawl of our two charity shops to find some really bright red and blue fabrics.  On my first foray I found a large Christmas stocking in bright red foam-backed velour, some red lining material and a bright blue plastic mac.  Subsequently I came across a bright royal blue velour jogging suit – trousers and hooded top – and I used that instead of the mac.

As the puppet would have to be at least life-size, I did my usual trawl through Google for skeleton and size information as well as reference pictures. It was at this stage that I decided to go for a Red and Green Macaw because it’s a bit bigger than a Red Macaw and has green rather than yellow feathers on its wings.  (I can’t remember now why the colour was important).

Next I got out my stash of empty plastic milk bottles, wire coat hangers, some thinner wire and my masking tape.  Having consulted the skeleton for sizes and fashioned the legs from bits of the coat hangers, attaching feet made from the thinner wire, I wrapped the “thighs” with some of my non-woven cotton cloth and covered the lot with masking tape.

 

a pair of legs and feet for the parrot and the top part of a beak made from milk bottle.
7 pair of legs and milk bottle beak.

Then, using the skull images for size and shape, I made a rough shape of the head from bottle bits.

After first attempting the parts of the beak using curved bits from the life-size milk bottles, I decided that I’d be better off needle felting them, especially as I had been advised that the parrot’s head should be oversized for the body, to be more easily seen by the audience – the milk bottle beaks weren’t big enough.  The felt beak was a better idea anyway as it enabled me to stitch on the inside a piece of foam tubing just big enough to get a finger inside which would help with opening and closing the beak.  I stitched the beak parts to the head – one advantage of using milk bottle bits is that you can stitch through them quite easily.

I drew a line on the skull where the white skin of the face would meet the red head feathers and covered the face with masking tape.  Then, using black glass eyes, I constructed slightly protruding eyes surrounded by masking tape eyelids,  Next came the head “feathers” using part of the toe of the Christmas stocking, which was basically the right shape. This was stitched on following the line I had drawn and the top of the beak.

Finally I painted the face white and added the red lines which appear on a parrot’s face and I also added extra pieces of the red velour to the puppet’s neck.

Next the body, which needed to be hollow so that I could get my arm up through it with my hand protruding from the top so it would go inside the separate puppet-head.  This would dictate the size of the body – from my wrist to the crook of my elbow – as my elbow had to be outside the puppet.  I had already made a pattern for the body based on the skeleton image which I had downloaded and luckily it was the same length as my forearm.  The body “skeleton” was constructed from a couple of milk bottles stitched together and covered in masking tape.

The legs were then attached to the body with more wire and so that the right leg could be moved up and down and side to side using the stick which was attached to the foot for ease of manipulation.

The legs and the lower part of the body were painted red, rather than covered in fabric “feathers” .  The body front was covered with more of the red Christmas stocking fabric.

A tail was needed and this would have to cover up that part of my arm which wasn’t inside the puppet.  I made it from pieces cut from the foam sling which the hospital gave my husband last year after he tried to cut his thumb off with a circular saw.  I covered this (the foam, not the thumb) with blue velour from the jogging suit.  I also cut three foam feather shapes which I covered in some of the red lining material and these were stitched to the blue tail and  then onto the bottom end of the body front.  I also added some more blue velour to the front of the body between the legs.

Next some wings.  These I also made from the foam sling and covered with blue velour and red lining material and also some green fabric – painted calico.  When all was stitched down, Polly was finished.

Time was getting on by this stage, it was January and the desk and suitcase still hadn’t appeared so I couldn’t practice the moves Polly would have to make.  However I still had to make the other parrot – the “dead drunk” one.  With so little time available it would have to be a lot less detailed if more substantial than the puppet.

Out came the milk bottles again and the foam sling.  The body was just one bottle – a bit square-ish but it would have to do – covered in red lining material.  I made a pair of legs with feet with wire covered in masking tape.  These were attached to the body – stuck straight out in a “dead bird” position.  The shape of the wings and tail was cut out of the last of the foam sling and this was stitched to the body, then covered in red, green and blue fabric.  The head was made in a similar way to the puppet’s but with closed eyes.  The beak was actually the one previously made from bottle plastic covered in masking tape and painted.  The head was stitched – very firmly – to the body.  It stood up well to being bashed against the table, thank heavens.

I think it was barely 2 weeks before actual performance that the customs desk and the suit case turned up for us to rehearse with.  It transpired that, because of the size of both, I was only going to be able to get head and shoulders and body down as far as breast bone visible to the audience, so I needn’t have spent time with the legs and tail after all.  Had I known I might instead have made the wings so they could open.  After a few rehearsals I decided that, for operational reasons, I would actually fix the puppet’s head to its body permanently.

Here he is performing his little heart out!

Performing parrot with assistance from actors playing Mr Watt, Mr Wright and Customs Officer
25 Performing parrot with assistance from Mr Watt, Mr Wright and Customs Officer. Note Watt & Wright’s “sunburnt faces”
Performing parrot with assistance from actors playing Mr Watt, Mr Wright, Customs Officer and Security Officer
26 Performing parrot with assistance from Mr Watt, Mr Wright, Customs Officer and Security Officer
26 Performing parrot with assistance from actors playing Mr Watt, Mr Wright, Customs Officer and Security Officer
27  Performing parrot with assistance from Mr Watt, Mr Wright, Customs Officer and Security Officer
WHY DO FELTING NEEDLES BREAK? DO YOU BLAME YOUR TOOLS OR IS IT OPERATOR ERROR? IN 3 PARTS

WHY DO FELTING NEEDLES BREAK? DO YOU BLAME YOUR TOOLS OR IS IT OPERATOR ERROR? IN 3 PARTS

Part 3 How we use the needles:

Let’s think a little more about bending and braking.

We have looked at some of the properties of needles and their parts of most concern to us.  (https://feltingandfiberstudio.com/2025/03/27/why-do-felting-needles-break-do-you-blame-your-tools-or-is-it-operator-error/)  we looked at how the needles are used in industry, in felting machines, to take fiber and create non-woven fabrics. The felting machine used many needles together in a needle board, moving quickly, to a set depth. The needle’s actual time working is much longer in industry than it is for a needle working for most hand felter’s. (https://feltingandfiberstudio.com/2025/04/06/why-do-felting-needles-break-do-you-blame-your-tools-or-is-it-operator-error-in-3-parts/).

let’s consider how we, as hand felters, interact with our needles.

Acquisition:

Where we get our needles matters -are we selecting needle Re-sellers who are purchasing from manufacturers that have high standers of quality control and sell good to excellent quality needles?      Within the various manufacturers of felting needles, there is some variation in the flexibility (quality) of the needles. Some are a bit stiffer, some are a bit more flexible, but if a company makes truly crappy needles industry will avoid buying them and they go out of business. If you are buying directly from a company you trust (you have quality control within the manufacturing process) or from a reputable reseller of those companies (we have a few very good ones available online), you can be pretty sure that the needle quality will be good to excellent.

There is usually more than one needle manufacturer per manufacturing country. The main 3 seem to be Germany, China and India. So saying all needles from country X are horrible probably isn’t true (though I did see rumors from India about China and from China about India). I have tried only three types of branded needles from China; the first was only available in small batches through re-sellers online. They labeled their needles by colour, but I found them a bit stiffer than, the second company that I regularly deal with. They sell in boxes of 500 as well as sell directly to the industry. The third, again sold in small batches of 100 needles, only the triangle shape and in limited number of gauges. They also were a bit stiffer but did work. All work reasonably well, but they are not exactly the same. Remember what i like may not be exactly the same as what you like. If resellers offer a verity pack of a brand, try that, and see what you like best in both the various shapes and different manufacturers. Some resellers may be reluctant to tell you their suppler (it’s sort of like asking a lady her age…), but asking if they know the original Manufacturer may be better received.  If they are unsure, they could get back to you with the information. I have a suspicion we may have a few sellers adding different colour codes to the same manufacturer’s needles.  As long as the needles are working well, I am not too concerned about what colour they are.

4 resellers of felting needles, 13.1) 4 resellers who offer multi packs of needles. we know Heidi feathers has stated she has GB needles. i found the Miusie needles good but a bit stiff, but they are the only ones i have noticed carry the cone needles so far. i have liked both Fiber Craft and Olive Sparrow needles but don’t know their manufactures (it sort of like asking a lady her age….)

Part of selecting felting needles will be what is available to you, thus what you will tend to use. If you can’t find a reseller selling GB needles from Germany, you can’t see for yourself if you like their needles. The same with companies from China or India (sorry, I haven’t knowingly tried needles from a company from India yet). If you don’t know what company a reseller is selling, it’s very hard to compare quality and buy what you like best. That said, none of the main manufacturers should be total duds, although you may prefer one over the other.

So, Needles from different companies can be different (using different formulas of metal for the needles). There is also variation in flexibility within a company’s line of needles. The needle shapes used in pre-needleing machines are stated to have greater flexibility in the web. (Two of the per-needleing options, Vario, and Conical both have a tapered shaft with varying sizes of barbs up the working part of the needles. We are now occasionally seeing them for sale). Some years ago, GB said it was researching a needle with even greater flexibility but came out with barbs that had extended run times. If greater flexibility is achieved in the industry, (so they can run their machines faster), this should also help hand felters. We will not have to be as careful with how we poke our fiber, while remembering rule#2 (the direction the needle goes in is the direction the needle goes out).

13.2-13.3) comparison of Dur and Regular needle barbs, and showing fiber in the barbs

We should also consider a recent complain about needle quality.  At the moment, there have been very few complaints of purchasing already worn needles. Worn needles can suggest that the needles have been used in needle boards, than are sold to us. We do not want used needles (ok that sounds bad in a number of ways!)  This does not seem to be a common problem at the moment, but it’s good to know if you get oddly dull needles.  Needles, that are already worn, will be more fragile and will break more easily than needles that are just starting their working life. Worn needles will not move fiber efficiently compared to a needle of the same gauge and shape that is not worn, and with the least distraction from rule #2, a worn needle will break. This is not operator error; it is a faulty tool.

Care of needles:

Where and how you store your needles may increase or decrease the chance of breakage.

I am sure you have seen me store my needles in my working surface. This has both pros and cons.

Pros:

  • Needles are close to hand when working and have a predictable storage spot so less likely to get lost (as long as you remember where you put your mat)
  • You can organize your needles from course to fine from one side to the other of your mat. This also helps reduce trial and error finding the needle you want, if you have unlabeled needles
  • This works well on mats that are larger than your project

Cons

  • If your project is larger than your mat, you lack storage spots (then a half pool noodle piece separate from the mat works well)
  • If you forget to take all the needles out of the end of the mat before you start working, you may hit one as you are working.
  • I have seen someone reach for a needle, forgetting they left another one in the way, bang it with their hand, and break it.

half a pool noodle divided into sections by gauge size14.1) half a pool noodle divided into sections by gauge size

I have seen loose in a pill bottle, loose in a small mettle tin, loose in a glass jar or loose in a pencil case.  Other than the pencil case where depending what else is thrown in with the needles they may get damaged by other objects or poke through the fabric and stab the felter, the bottles, tins  and other hard surface storage places can dull the needle point, if the needles are left to rattle around inside. If you add a bit of wool or foam to the bottom for the tips to go in, it helps to keep the needles from rattling and protects the tips. I found some lovely screw top test tube shapes at the dollar store (silly people were selling them full of sports erasers, when clearly they were meant to hold needles!) I added a bit of wool and a piece of cardstock saying what type of needle and where I got them from in each container.  I keep the majority of my needles in the boxes they came in (wrapped in wax paper as they were shipped). but most people don’t buy in batches of 500 to get the cool storage box!  Try to find something that suites you. If you felt only in one place, then half a piece of pool noodle  on your desk or keeping needles in the end of your felting surface may work. For stay at home felters, I have seen some interesting needle “pin cushions” made from old tea cups or fine silver. If you are more mobile with your felting, then a few tight sealing containers with something to protect the needle tips and labels may soot you best.

A few of my needles and a couple of the needle holders. (the wooden handled one usually has a piece of pool noodle on the needles or I have stored in a tall pill bottle with the needles in beside it.14.2) A few of my needles and a couple of the needle holders. (the wooden handled one usually has a piece of pool noodle on the needles or I have stored in a tall pill bottle with the needles in beside it.

Humidity:

Unless you are living in an area of high humidity or using your needles on wet felting, while it’s still wet, rust should not be too much of a concern for most needle felters. If you are living in a damp or humid area, then take precautions to protect your tools. Storing them in sealed containers, using a light oil to protect them when not in use or trying silica packages to reduce the likelihood of rust may all be options.  (Stay away from cellulose sponges as working surfaces since they attract dampness, which is great when cleaning a kitchen but not for storing needles or using as a felting surface.)

Selecting the correct needle for the job.

As I mentioned previously, in industry this is very hush hush information and is the driving motivator in removing the full needle specification from the needle boxes we buy (ok some of us buy).

A few (seven of nine) of the needle boxes on my desk15.1)A few (seven of nine) of the needle boxes on my desk

-Are we choosing the most optimal needle for the job?     Another easy way to break a needle is either choosing the wrong needle for the job, or, not feeling when to change gauges as you are working.  Paying attention to how the needle feels (palpating) as you insert it into the fiber (End Feel), lets you know when to change from one gauge to another. For most projects, we usually work from courser needles to finer needles. As you start felting a sculpture, the fiber is not as dense or firm; as you continue to stab, poke and impale your project, the firmer the felt becomes. At some point, the feeling will change (this is that “end Feel” I have talked about previously). There will be an increase in resistance. Instead of adding more force (which can cause a needle to break), shift to a finer gauge needle. This should feel easier to insert than the courser needle you were just using. But remember, finer needles require stricter adherence to rule #2; the fine gauges are thinner and are more likely to break if used aggressively (“Kill It!!!!” type stabbing). Slow down, think, and then stab. In addition, dragging fibers with the tip of a fine or extra fine needle can be enough to catch and break or bend a needle. Just be careful if you like to adjust your fibers with your needle. (There are other pointy things that you can use to adjust fibers, such as a flower (boutonniere flower pin or stylus, that will save needles if you tend to break them this way.)

I tend to think of needles comparing them by how much fiber each will move.

  • Increase fiber movement-
    • Gauge – a “Course”32g needle moves more than a “medim”36g & 38g moves more fiber than a “fine”40g & 42g which will move more that an “ultra-fine” 46g needle.
    • Number of barbs – the more barbs per side, the more fiber the needle can move. So a 333 moves more than a 222 which moves more than a crown needle (111)
    • Shape –the number of sides works with the number of barbs if you add one more side (a quod star needle) it will be more aggressive then a 3 sided needle of the same gauge and number of barbs per side.

Sometimes we want to be move less fiber and have greater control of smaller amounts of fiber, so you would look at the above list in reverse, ie. Use finer needles, fewer bards, and less sides to control smaller amounts of fiber per insertion of the needle.

When picture felting and using a multi-tool,

As I said before, you can also have problems when you are using a multi-needle tool as you work, the density of the felt increases. The spacing of the needles in the tool tries to grab the same fiber in multiple places (this can be more noticeable when working with longer fibers or combed top). This will feel like a strong resistance to entering the felt. If you increase pressure and force the needles in, they have a high chance of one or more breaking. Instead, stop and either shift to finer needles or take some of the needles out so you have them spaced farther apart in your holder.  Just because a needle holder can hold X number of needles does not mean you need to have all of them installed.

the Blue Fake Clover tool showing all needles inside the holder part of the Blue Fake Clover tool with the needle holder pulled out and only 3 needles in to create more space between needles 15.2-15.3) the Blue Fake Clover tool; it’s a bit noisier and not as smooth as the real clover tool but it’s also a lot cheaper. If you really like this tool try to save up for the real green version. Or try it, if a felter-friend has one.

It’s actually quite nice to have a few of the same style of holder (labeled) with different gauges in them, so you don’t have to interrupt your creative flow and stabbing.  You may want to indicate which holder has which needle by labeling or colour coding them. As you finish the outer layer of a picture, you may move to an even finer needle, which will give you increased fine control and, if you work at an angle to your work, a smoother finished surface.  For sculpture, if you are attaching limbs into a body, and if your attachment site is not too compacted, you may find a T32 moves vigorous amounts of wool to embed fibers from the limb into the core of the body.

I have had needles brake while using a needle holder. This is the most common problem I have with needles. While I do love a good needle holder, for its increased speed of felting (drat, just when I said not to rush) and its ergonomics, it is just more comfortable to hold.  For picture-felting, I often use the Clover or fake clover tool with the moving guard, but I also use it on 3-D sculptures occasionally, too. When I was working on Mrs. Mer’s lower fish body into her butterfly koi tail, I was using the fake clover tool with T40s or T42s. I caught the armature (she is very thin there, so the armature is close to the surface), and I broke most of the needles in the holder (DRAT!) and switched back to a single needle.

moveing the gaurd back showing the boken needles in the fake clover tool15.4) Oh the Embarrassment! Multiple broken needles in my fake clover tool (I hit twisted armature wire close to the surface of the sculpture I was working on

Needles also break if you catch them in the twists of a wire armature.  Again, slow down and feel as you carefully insert the needle. Designing your armature so it is buried as deeply in your sculpture as possible will make the outer layers less needle-eating. I have not lost many needles to wires but occasionally if I grab a finer needle than I thought I was grabbing, (who put it back in the medium part of my working surface and not the fine section over at the edge? I need to have a chat with that person….oh drat.) I did lose a couple of needles working on those little chickadees, but I did do a lot of chickadees, so the bird-to-dead-needle ratio was still low.

I have a couple of needles that have bent but not broken. I have kept them; they are often just perfect for getting into a spot, especially when I know there is an armature wire close by.

Note on wire: There are lots of options, and it’s a huge topic, so I won’t get too distracted here, but some types tend to be greater needle eaters than others. Some of this is what you have regionally and get used to using. I would like to investigate this further, but not today. Just slow down and be careful if you are working with sculptures with an armature of whatever wire you have chosen.

Are we using a work surface that you feel comfortable with and that works with your project?  

There are many different surfaces and felting supports. Each of these options has a different feel as the needle hits the surface of it.  Chose the one that feels comfortable and work for you, as well as what seem most appropriate for the type of needle felting you are doing. If you have the opportunity, try out as many as you can before buying the ones you like.

  • Foam –packing, upholstery(avoid those with fire retardant), eco-friendly foam, pool noodle, high density, sponge, vary in price from free to expensive
  • Hybrid – felt covered sponge, cheaper than the wool mat
  • Burlap rice bag- (goes on sale for Chinese new year!) quite heavy but nice to sculpt on. Not lightest choice for mobile felting. remember to Lift work frequently.
  • Wool mats – thinner .5” ironing mats, 1-1.5” wool felting mats, make your own wool mats, are more expensive but last longer then the foam mats.
  • Clover brush tool, to bristle broom used as a work surface; Smaller in size, than other options. Cover brush tool is quite expensive but dose last well.

Support surfaces for working on 3D sculptures:

  • Small rice bags, pieces of foam or pool noodle can support a limb or part of a sculpture, so you are not air stabbing and have a greater chance of ether braking the needle or stabbing yourself.

 

Various foam serfaces with wooden 3 needle tools and felted mouse Felted mouse on burlap rice bag with blue fake clover tool in backgroundwool felt mat with small picture felt on it 16.1-16.3) a few of my work surfaces. Note the heavy zip-lock freezer bag covering my wool pad I have fund it reduces wool transfer to the wool mat. (There is green wool imbedded in the mat which is why I now am protecting it).

Another way to break needles is a shift between your working surface, and what you are working on. It is not too common since most picture felters are often working on surfaces larger than there image, but I have had this happen. While I was working on the landscape moose bag (mid weight canvas ground fabric), on the far edge of the image and the foam kneeling pad shifted inside the bag, taking out my single T38-333 needle! (Snap!!) I could fix that by having the working surface the same size as the interior of the bag so it would not shift or move. (ok, working on the handle of my walker as I was sitting on the walker was also not the best choice of working location). Now you know my shame. I, too, have broken needles!! But not too many, and usually there are long stretches where I don’t break any.

While thinking about working surfaces, we should also consider working depth. This means that the depth the needle is inserted into the work and work surface, the deeper into the work surface the needle goes increase the likelihood of breaking a needle due to accidentally shifting your vector as you remove the needle. It also uses more strength, which can fatigue the felter faster than working only as deeply as needed to embed the fiber into the picture or sculpture.  You only need to move the fiber to imbed it in what you are working on, you don’t need to deeply impale the mat. Do you remember the industry report that suggested the first barb was doing the majority of the work? If we inspect the needle we are about to use and notice the position of the barbs on the working part, we can then insert the needle to the depth that will engage the barbs, thus moving the fiber where we want it to go. If you are trying to stab in a more shallow manner, you could switch to a crown needle whose barbs are located very close to the tip. I have used this type of needle effectively to add colour to one side of a thin petal without adding it to the other side. (I was also, work at a very shallow needle angle to achieve this!)

Angle of inserting must be the same as angle of extraction (another way to say rule #2)

needle direction instructions from china17.1)  simplified instructions that came with one of my random needle purchases.

The angle you impale your work will change the effect you see at the surface. Remembering always, that the direction you move the needle is the direction the fiber will move. Working at a lower angle and with finer needles will reduce the look of indentations in the surface. This helps give a smoother surface finish but the lower angle seems to increase the braking of rule #2 and then the breaking of the needle. So, stay focused and pay attention.

Note: if you have obvious needle dents, the surface of your work looks a bit like the skin of an orange, it is just that you need to felt a bit longer. The surface above the dent is not felted as much as the dented area, keep going.

Moving fiber to firm an area

Although your needle should always insert and exit in one direction or vector, You don’t have to only work from the outside to the inside.  you can push fiber through your sculpture towards the surface on the other side. You may want to do this to firm up the under structure in that area. An example would be when I was making sheep heads (they were for sheep pins), I know they still are not quite totally sheep-ly yet, but I am working on it, (I think it’s the bridge of the nose and lower mandible angle that’s messing me up. I should go visit Ann and have a chat with some of her sheep).  I noticed a couple of times, I would get the nose exactly as I wanted it, but it was not as firm in the understructure as I would like. who wants a floppy nosed sheep?. I didn’t want to have to add more wool from the outside and change what I had just sculpted.  so I worked from the not yet finished back of the head, to move fiber by stabbing through the sheep head towards the nose. If you are aware where the barb placement is on your needle you can push fiber to the depth that you want to firm up.  I know I should have made the understructure firmer before going on to sculpting the final nose shape but sometimes I get over excited and work in a less than optimal order.

When I want to enthusiastically move fiber but still have reasonable control, I gravitate to one of my 36g needles I am often using coriedale which is a bit bigger fiber than merino. If you were sculpting with Merino wool, you would find the needle a bit more enthusiastic since more fibers would be cot in the barbs.

Another way to think about moving fiber from the other side, is if you have watched or used a drill and you want the bit to go into the wood but not through it. you can measure the depth you want with the bit and then add tape so you will stop when you get to the tape and before you go through the wood.  If you need to work from the back of a sculpture, and have trouble guess-timating, you could try a bit of painters tape on a single needle to get the depth you want?

Holding a single needle

  • Consistency in how you hold the needle
  • Comfort in holding the needle (no death grip and hand cramping!)
    • Different shaped holders require different hand positions, the main shapes being a pen like grip or a nob like grip. I have seen only one that is held as you would a hammer.
    • Add something to the needle shaft to make it larger, tool dip, tape, elastics
  • Practice, if you are comfortable with using your tools you will have better control and brake fewer needles.

There are various ways to hold a single loose needle. A couple of my Japanese authored  books were very specific about having the crank in the crock under a knuckle and stabilizing with your thumb and second finger. This is not comfortable for everyone; a modified version may work better for you. You need to find something that is comfortable so you can be consistent in how you hold your needle. You want to feel that the needle is an extension of your finger like you feel a pen or pencil is an extension of your fingers when you write. (We don’t do a lot of writing anymore, I will have to come up with a better example soon)

You may have grumpy fingers that don’t like to grip fine skinny needles. Then a needle holder or other way to make the needle fatter will make holding the needle more comfortable.  Wrapping from the crank down the shaft with elastics (I like postal dropping elastics) or using tool dip may give a better feeling grip. If that does not help enough, there are single needle holders or any of the multi tool holders can be loaded with just one needle.  The multi tools can be a bit more cumbersome feeling with only one needle, you may prefer the grip and ease of seeing your work with a single needle or pen tool.

Most of the single needle holders have the needle positioned off center, which can also happen when you use a single needle in a multi needle holder. This can feel a bit odd and can make it difficult to coordinate where you are exactly poking the needle. This can increase the chances of breaking a needle.  The holders are a more ergonomic choice than a single needle. If you are careful to hold the needle holder in the same position, it will be easier to anticipate where the needle will poke with a little practice.

wooden needle holder, with offset needle Painted wooden single needle holder instructions on how to add the needle to the holder18.1-18.3) not too expensive wooden single needle holder stores and holds a single needle. The needle is positioned off center, so try to be consistent in the orientation and how you hold it for better control.

Note: there are 2 sizes of the wooden single needle holder being sold at the moment. They look the same if not seen together. The older one is much smaller in diameter and only comes in clear finished wood. The more resent model is available in both clear wood and in a few colours. If you got the older one, and find it a bit skinny, try adding a foam pencil grip to it if you are finding it a bit thin.

-Distraction, which leads to forgetting to follow rule #2.

  • Stay focused.
  • Stick to listening to audio books rather than trying to watch YouTube or a movie will help too.
  • Slow down and enjoy the process of felting, don’t rush to finished the project.

Once a needle has broken:

If a needle breaks in your sculpture, extract it!! A strong magnet and fine embroidery scissors or an Exacto knife can be helpful. I have an empty pill bottle I use as a sharps container. I can then dispose of the broken needle bits in a real sharps container later.  You can usually get a real sharps container (for needles and syringes) at a pharmacy. However, the pill bottle is just easier to carry around with your work. If you have a few needle felting friends you may want to share a single sharps box amongst you.

tall pill bottle with broken needles in front of needle boxes19) A tall pill bottle will hold broken needles until you can drop them in a sharps box.

So for us, if we are buying needles ultimately sourced from companies with good quality control and not leaving them in humid places, it is more likely to be operator error. Of which the most likely that we have been momentarily distracted ,

(Look squirrel!!!) sqwuerl on fence lookng like he got cot doing somthing and has frozen looking at you.20) Squirrel on fence distracting us!

and forgot rule #2: “the vector the needle goes in, is the vector the needle goes out”. No changing direction mid stab!!!

Hints that may help

-Speed felting sounds fun but can lead to both broken needles and the need for Band-Aids. If you are finding it hard to slow down your enthusiasm, (well, it is needle felting and just fantastic, so I can see the problem!) and you have switched from listening to Techno to snooze massage music and it still isn’t helping. You could try the pink closed-cell foam insulation. Mine has a giant pink panther on it, and it comes in sheets up to 4’x8’ in case you want to work really big! But you can buy smaller pieces, too.  Why I suggest this unusual work surface is that when you stab it, especially with enthusiasm, it screams! If you break rule #2 even slightly, it will also break the needle. So, the screaming reduces the depth of stabbing, and the solidity will make you much more careful about keeping watch on how you move your needle. It may take a few broken needles, but it seems to be very good at focusing your attention so you don’t break many more.

Pink closed-cell foam (Home Depot) rigid foam insulation has a picture of the pink panther on it21) Pink closed-cell foam (Home Depot) rigid foam insulation

A final way to break needles I had not considered:

It was brought to my attention by one of my local guild members that another way needles break that I had not considered; she said that her needles break immediately after stabbing her. This is because once they have drawn blood, she breaks them. Well, that will teach them never to do that again, but it may be less expensive to use finger protection (I did review a few options to keep the pointy end of the needle and your fingers separated). Which would bring us to a review of rule #1: “the pointy end goes in the wool and not in your fingers.”  So easy to say! So hard to remember,  sometimes!

Now, what do you think, should we blame our tools or was it operator error after all?

Have fun and keep felting!

P.S. I hope this wasn’t too long and that it might get you thinking about your needles in a different way. (and you don’t have to break them if they try to stab you back!). I overdid it a bit on Monday at the guild library, but it was wonderful to see friends again! Now I’m off to bed.

PSS: My brain still seems to have roving bits of anaesthetic in it, making me forget. I missed adding this, so unfortunately, it’s at the end now.

Practice (Time)

The time you have been needle felting is also a factor.

new to needle felting

  • enthusiasm, not sure how it all works, so want to stab deeply to make sure it works!
  • coordination, it takes a moment to get a feeling for where the tip of the needle is. Less eye-hand coordination = more Band-Aids and broken needles.

With practice and noticing barb placement, the type of enthusiasm changes, and the eye-hand coordination develops.

When first picking up a needle, you are intrigued and excited! Most students want to stab deeply and quickly, trying hard to do this new, exciting thing that takes eye-hand coordination they may not have used in quite this way before. When I started, I had a thick kitchen cellulose sponge, then traded that for a 3 inch thick foam piece. I initially stabbed both myself and what I was working on. I also went through quite a few broken needles.

As time passed, I have worked on thin surfaces and slowed down on the speed. I have dramatically decreased the broken needles and the need for Band-Aids. It’s still just as exciting to see fluffy wool turn into something, but the violence of attack has changed, and it’s more of a considered stabbing now. (Oh no, I sound dangerous again!)

I hope I don’t wake up again and realise a piece is missing. Really I will get back to having my whole brain free of anaesthetic eventually, they promised.

Thank you so much for reading to the end, or skimming it at least! Have fun and keep felting, whether it be wet, dry or damp (some of each)!!

Picture Update

Picture Update

I’ve been working on my picture a little.  I decided there was no definite direction for the sun. I added some lighter green to the trees on the far edge, which also defined them more. They look very yellow-green in the photos, but they are much more green in person. I rearranged and added some very light grey to the mountains.

felted picture of mountains, trees and water.
Finding the sun.

For the mid-ground, I thought maybe some bushes. I added 3 to work with but didn’t get very far before I pulled them off.

adding 3 bushes to the previous picture.
Bushes

I thought maybe some flowers in the mid-ground would work. I tried out several colours of sari silk waste.

Softsilk is a brand name, I think. It is shreaded finer than the other sari silk waist I have seen.  The pink and the brown are from the same batch of silk waist. I decided the softsilk was the best colour.

silk added to the mid ground as flowers.
Flowers in the mid-ground

Now, I need to figure out the foreground. I may needlfelt and stitch some flowers. I may need to do something to blur the straight line in the sky on the left. I don’t notice it until I take a picture.

Playing with Book Pages

Playing with Book Pages

I have been playing around with different techniques and creating a few book pages for the book I’m repurposing that I showed you here. This is another book that will be added to over a long period of time and these pages may change as I go along or might stay the same. Who knows? I’m going to make a bunch of pages and then put them together at some point. Some might not get used or torn up and used on something else. It is a fluid type process that is ongoing.

Repurposed book pages covered with alcohol ink covered packing tape.

Our play with alcohol ink left me with  pieces of colored tape to use and so I taped them down to a page spread from the repurposed book. You can still see most of the page underneath and it gives an interesting. Very shiny though, which isn’t my favorite look. It seems a bit overwhelming all on one page so this might get cut up into smaller pieces but for now, I left it as is.

Repurposed book pages with collage and natural ink painted background.

I had gotten a free trial from Golden paints of Light Dimensional Ground that I wanted to try. I painted it on the book page first and then added some different natural inks over top of it. The ground is supposed to be used to be a surface for watercolor paints on surfaces that don’t accept watercolor paint well. It is clear when dry and gives a bit rougher surface than regular paper. It worked well with the ink as it didn’t soak into the paper the same way it usually would. Then I added some other pieces of collage and a small painting on a ledger page.

Repurposed book pages with collage, painting and printing.

This is just one page as opposed to a spread. This page is gessoed first then painted with acrylic and ink. Next I printed with a small stamp that reminds me of tree rings and added another small ledger painting.

Repurposed book pages with collage and natural ink painted background.

This last spread has the undercoating of Light Dimensional Ground and then ink. On the right page, I added a couple of layers of painted tissue that was part of our mark making session.

You might notice that I am sticking to a color scheme this time, more neutral than my last book. Sticking to the tree theme though, I can’t seem to help that. It’s my favorite subject if you couldn’t tell.

A less ordinary denim jacket, and a finish.

A less ordinary denim jacket, and a finish.

Until recently, a denim jacket has not featured in my wardrobe, but one is never too old for a style change! I spotted a denim jacket in my local charity shop, it felt like a good quality cotton, and in a nice muted shade of blue. It was a good fit, so that was a bonus, and it came home with me.

I had been adding stitching to my patched jeans for some time, and I wanted to try some stitching or embroidery on a jacket, but without the jacket costing a lot of money. I like the effect of the stitching on my jeans. They are my gardening/diy/decorating jeans really, but they also look rather nice when washed. There are a few different fabric patches used in the photograph of one leg below, and in the other jean leg – no photo. The jeans (in photo) are just washed – the stitched area looks very rouched, but is flat when ironed. So, these jeans have quite a bit of life left in them, and the stitching will add strength to the patches and the cotton fabric.

I drew a grid type pattern on the back panel of my jacket at an angle, and a smaller portion of the pattern on the lower part of the panel. I have stitched both of these in a sashiko style of sewing, but it is not sashiko. I have used coton a broder embroidery thread; the whole thread is used – it is a single strand, and it behaves very well. The shade is a a muted green, and I like it very much

I used a water soluble fabric with a design on to aid me with placement of the grid. There are lots of online sellers offering these designs to make repairs and patching of garments more attractive. I had two pieces with different designs on them, and my simplified change to this one worked well for me. The water soluble material dissolves easily, but needs a couple of rinses to clear properly. It is not as easy to stitch through as some of the blurb portrays it to be. Drawing on the fabric with a heat erasable pen is good, but care is needed with any graph/lines or design, and it is easier to pass the needle through to make several stitches, than it is on the printed design.

I will add more stitching over the next few forum posts, and probably more colour too.

I do like adding stitching as a decorative effect, this photo below is from on a forum post in 2022.

My blanket is now complete too. I have added  a backing of french terry fabric, it is very soft to touch now. The youngest grandchild said it was a bit scratchy, so I decided to add the backing. I did not wish to cover the lovely blanket stitch along the blanket edge; I had to fold under an edge and sew it down using the sewing machine. I think it turned out ok – even the corners – they were more tricky than I imagined.

I used some embroidery floss with a stitch to tie both together. I am hoping that these ties will escape from searching little fingers.

I have a new obsession

I have a new obsession

Let’s talk hobbies. My neurospicy brain enjoys rotating them – when I go back to a beloved interest after an extended absence, it’s as if I’m rediscovering its joys all anew. There’s dopamine to be had in this sort of novelty and I’m not one to shy away from it (just don’t overdo it if you’re like me).

The past couple of months however, I discovered a new hobby, and I’m not quit sure how to feel about it: sewing miniature clothing.

I like being able to whip up a pair of trousers in an hour, functional pockets included, and getting the satisfaction of a task completed. If I were to put my brain in an MRI scanner afterwards I’m sure it’d be lit up like a USA Christmas home in December.

There’s only so much fun to be had sewing mini clothes if there is no one to wear them, though – so naturally I’ve purchased a few dolls to dress, all of different body proportions to keep things interesting. I’m 45 and never had a particular interest in being an “adult fashion doll collector,” as they are known, and yet here we are. What is going on?

Anyway, meet the posse.

 

Four Barbies (three female, one male) and a vintage Cindy doll on a shelf
Ken is wearing trousers and t-shirt made by me, the sitting Barbie’s skirt is also mine as well as the pink blouse.

 

They’re currently residing in an unglamorous IKEA shelf cubicle but, of course, I have plans to make their accommodations nicer. Miniature sewing is morphing into tiny carpentry, help!

Oh, who am I kidding? It’s already happened. I built them a wardrobe with popsicle sticks and balsa wood rods to keep their clothes tidy and cute. I even bought shoebox templates to store their footwear. I’m in deep.

 

Handmade miniature wardrobe with tiny shoeboxes, clothes on hangers and a handbag with sunglasses
Handmade wardrobe, shoeboxes and the grey pleated slacks are also my doing. The bag is sadly commercial, my hand sewing skills aren’t that good yet.

 

There is definitely something *very* satisfying about tiny pockets…

 

Tiny doll trousers with my finger inside one of the pockets
“POCKETSES!” (I hope you’re a Lord of the Rings fan and get the reference…)

Barbie doll wearing the trousers I showed in the photo above

 

Like I said, it’s a weird thing for me to have acquired this new taste for dolls. What do you think, is it weird? Let me know your thoughts!

Why do Felting needles break? Do you blame your tools or is it operator error? In 3 parts

Why do Felting needles break? Do you blame your tools or is it operator error? In 3 parts

Part 2

Last post, we reviewed some of the properties of felting needles. https://feltingandfiberstudio.com/2025/03/27/why-do-felting-needles-break-do-you-blame-your-tools-or-is-it-operator-error/

The Machines

So, what does industry do with these fascinating needles?

The Felting needles are used in part of a line of machines used to create various types of non-woven/felt material. Here are a few examples of what come out the other end of the machines: automotive textiles, filtration fabrics, to sheets of felt. The needle chosen for each type of felting machine, pre-felting, felting and structuring if needed, will give you various finished products. Which needle for which job is very hush hush with only generalizations (automotive, filters, landscape fabrics, acoustics…)are given.

Let’s take a look at a sample line of machines to make felt.

2 adjacent needle boards in a prefelting macheine8) Pre-needling machine set up in parallel boards.

There are a number of different machines in a line, and the configuration will depend on the nonwoven that is being produced. As in spinning, there are machines at the front of the line that bake the bale of fiber (possibly wool), which fluffs and separates it from its compacted state in the bale. As the fiber goes through the line, the fiber will be carded, drafted, and the crosslapper will lay the web into a uniform thickness in the number of layers as required for the final product. The web drafter will make sure the web is an even thickness.  Eventually, the web will meet the pre-felting, then felting machines with their board or boards of felting needles. There may also be another machine holding structuring needles depending, again, on what is wanted as the end product.  After that, it exits and is sent to the winder to create rolls of whatever was being made.

9.1 – 9.3) Some of the machines in a production line

Depending on the machine used (Pre-needling or Main needling), the needles boards may have a different orientation with 2 adjacent needle boards (2x 4,500 needles/m) or in the main felting machine that I was reading about, 2 sets of boards working towards each other.  There are other configurations, this was just one of the sample combination lines I was looking at. For the main boards, “single or parallel uppers” were listed as having “2,000 needles/m while the Single- and multi-board operation upstroke and downstroke, tandem operation had 3,000 needles/m, 5,000 needles/m or 8,000 needles/m”. Basically that means there are a lot of needles in a board of needles. I do remember I found the speed the machines were running somewhere, but I can’t find the info at the moment. I remember it seemed very fast!

In the needle boards/beds (I have heard both, but G-B uses boards) the needles are set in using the crank (that odd little bend at the top of the needle. It is always nice to know it has a purpous not just poking my finger if I turn the needle the wrong way.) The angle of the crank will position the needle as it meets the web.  There is a tool to help get the needle in the correct orientation. If you do not get the alignment correct to the moving web the implication was less efficiency and greater numbers of broken or bending needles.

crank check tool for setting needles in a needle board10) Crank positioning tool

It is also important to get the working depth of the needle set correctly in the machine.  Since wear analyses of the needles, have shown that the first barb performs around half of the total work carried out by the needle, and that in most cases only three to five barbs are actually interacting with the web.  As hand needle felters, we may also be primarily using the first barbs as we work, but we may have to borrow the industry’s equipment to find out.

In Industry, during a job, needles are not changed all at once, but usually 1/3 at a time. During the run of a job, the needles to be regularly cleaned of fiber dust, checked for any bent or broken needles, and sprayed with an anti-corrosive oil. (Regularly checking our needles would be good practice for hand felters, too.) How long needles remain in the needle board can be measured in machine operating hours, stroke rates or production quantity.

In the boards, the needles can catch and bend or break, they will also dull (tip or barb) over time. Dulling is not usually a problem hand felters need to worry about, unless you are working into a vary needle-dulling surface (which sounds like a silly idea) or are using a fiber with extreme abrasive qualities (I wonder what that would be? Has anyone tried to felt fiberglass? I have no idea why you might want to, but that might be strong enough to destroy barbs quicker than wool.  I would also not try asbestos fiber, it would destroy your lungs and probably give you cancer. I am getting distracted (it may be getting close to time for meds again, back on topic). Stick to wool and other fluffy fibers.  We will not stab our needles nearly as many times as a needle will impale fiber in the commercial machines.  Unfortunately, even if our needle tips are unlikely to dull significantly, we still will have needles bend or break.

Remember I mentioned cycling out needle, a third at a time, in a needle board during production?  I recently saw a complaint on YouTube about the purchase of a set of needles sold in three lengths. I am sure you have seen some resellers list their needles as “Small, Medium and large” with no specified gauge. Avoid these, you may get perfectly good needles, but in three lengths of the same gauge. Or worse, as this buyer described her cheap 3 length needles as “having blunt points and the barbs were worn and shallow”. This suggests she may have received needles pulled from a needle board. If a seller doesn’t know what gauge they are selling, be suspicious. They may be cheap, but they still may not be worth the price. If you receive worn-looking barbs on your needle, they are not moving fiber as efficiently as expected, then yes, you can blame your tools and the re-seller. Used industrial needles (pulled from a needle board) will also be weaker due to the hours of wear already on the needle and will be more likely to break, especially if we forget rule #2 (Never change vector, the direction the needle goes in is the direction the needle goes out).  So far, this seems to be a limited problem, but it’s good to be aware and cautious. Although the cheap price may be very tempting, stick to reputable resellers or manufacturers.

older 3 length needles by reseller no guage listed11) Sold by three lengths but no gauges.

In this older add, above, with needles sold by 3 lengths, it looks like the two on the right might be the same gauge and the short one may be finer, but the seller only lists lengths of overall needle. We can tell from the picture that the needles should have three 3 barbs per side. If you need to be extremely frugal, and sometimes these no-gauge needles are no cheaper than ones with information, ask the seller questions. If you don’t like the answer, don’t buy them. You could wind up with something you don’t want. (Sometimes, the deal is too good to be true.)

needles sold by lenth not by gauge. another exmple of needles sold by lenth not by gauge. 12.1 – 12.2) Here is an image of needles in three sizes being sold. Lots of measurements of lengths, but no mention of gauge.

Some sellers, who are not hand needle felters, just don’t realize what we need or want to know. If they get asked often enough they may start adding more information that is helpful to us. The Doer needles (non-industry site) now has much more helpful information on it. the improvement in information is likely due to a lot of pestering by hand needle felters, and more than just me.

I have bought lots of needles from Etsy resellers, Amazon, Aliexpress and at fiber festivals.  So far, I have not run into any that seem to have warn barbs or dulled tips. I tend to buy from sellers who know what they are reselling or directly from one of the manufacturers. Being curious, I have bought a few of the various needle felting kits, which include assorted needles (some un-gauged), a working surface and other tools. So far, all the needles have looked new and unused. Some of the needles do feel a bit less flexible (likely higher carbon content?), but they still work. You just have to be more enthusiastic about adhering to rule #2.

Next, we will look at how we use felting needles.

off topic update: Second trip out after surgery, this time to the renew my drivers license and health card(Glenn was driving). i seem to have forgotten my birthday this year. dose that mean i can stay the same age as last year?

Have fun and keep felting!

Two samples finished and some Canadian Weather

Two samples finished and some Canadian Weather

Before talking about felt, I just wanted to share with our friends who have mild winters. It is March here in Central Canada, and there is very little snow left. But as I said, it’s March, and March is a fickle month.  This is what I woke up to last Saturday.

15cm of snow on a table March 29 snowfall.

Followed by freezing rain overnight Sunday.

ski powl braking through freezing rain on top of snow. March 30, freezing rain on top of snow.

Do not be feeling sorry for me. This is fairly normal here. We expect it, but I am envious of you sitting out in your gardens enjoying the spring flowers.

Now some felt. I finished up the pink sample for the book-resist workshop. I finished the pages 2 different ways just to show them. I think it might look nice with a light inside.

         pink, round book resist with fat and flat fins. pink, round resist closed end.

I made a second sample using a football shape. It is smaller.

football shaped book resist

The resist was fiddley to get out because I didn’t want a hole in it. So, didn’t want to cut a hole in the end.

football shaped resist with gold fibre on it and hole cut to take resit out.

After removing the resist, I sewed up the hole.

whole sewn up after removing the resist. Stitching up the hole
stitching after finishing the felting and fulling. Stitching after fulling.

Here is how it looks finished. I am really pleased with it. The stitching was resistant to being pulled out, but I did get it out.

finished piece

I may have to make another one.   I may just have to stitch on this one. I have the wool ready for the next sample. I hope to have it done for you to see next time.

Paper Mache Bowls

Paper Mache Bowls

Quite a while ago, my local art group made paper mache clay and then created some bowls. They sat drying in my studio for a long time but then I finally decided to decorate them.  If you’re interested in making paper clay, there are numerous videos on YouTube explaining the process. Here’s one that shows how to make it with supplies that most people will have in their own kitchen. 

This video is not actually the one we followed since we used matte medium as the glue. You can use your own homemade paste, wheat paste (that you can buy and doesn’t need to be cooked) or some type of acrylic medium such as PVA or matte medium as the glue. We used egg cartons for the paper but you can use whatever paper you have on hand.

You can shape the clay over a plastic or silicone surface. I used plastic bowls for my mold and covered them with plastic wrap (thin kitchen plastic) before applying the clay. The clay takes quite a while to dry but you can speed the process up by putting them outside in warm weather under the sun. You need to make the paper mache thick enough so that it won’t break easily if you are making a bowl.

Two paper mache bowls in natural egg carton color.

 

Here are the two bowls after drying. The color comes from the grey egg cartons. These don’t have any extra color added. You can then paint or add painted paper to the bowls to decorate. I decided I didn’t want the shiny surface of acrylic paint so “what to do”? I had some natural inks we had made (again a long time ago). Amazingly, they were still good and not moldy. I had stored them in the refrigerator and we had added a small piece of clove which keeps the mold away.

Two paper mache bowls coated with a dark brown/black ink and brown ink.

Here are the bowls after I painted them with the ink. The bowl on the right is walnut ink. As the ink soaks into the paper, the bowl gets a little mushy until it dries again. I used a heat gun to dry it out so that I could go on to the next step. The bowl on the left is one layer of walnut ink and then one layer of walnut gall with ferous sulfate ink. I really liked the darkness that resulted and I’m thinking about using that bowl to display some 3D felt objects that I made for my Level 4 Stitch class. Hopefully, you will see those in the future when we have our exhibition.

I was left with deciding what paper to add to the outside of the brown bowl. I searched through my huge box of painted papers and right at the very bottom, I found an old “drop cloth” that was originally brown paper but had multiple colors of paint and prints and whatever got on to the paper as I painted other things. I liked that the paper when torn up, would not give any distinguishable patterns. Some people use torn single layers of napkin to decorate bowls but that looked way too commercial for me.

I made up some wheat paste, tore my drop cloth paper into strips and did more paper mache on the outside of the bowl. The process reminded me of my childhood making pinatas over balloons – messy hands but fun!

One paper mache bowl with outside covered with multicolored paper mache.

And here’s the result. I left the inside with just walnut ink.

Paper mache bowl turned upside down showing multicolored outside.

And here’s the bottom view so that you can see more of the paper that I added to the outside. The randomness of the colors and the printing on the brown paper really worked to get the look I wanted.

Electric Fringe Twister

Electric Fringe Twister

I have a confession to make… I seem to be falling behind on my fringe twisting duties.  It is a bit of a tedious job and requires sitting at the table and focusing on the task.  In the winter I find our kitchen quite cold, and so I have been putting off working on fringes.

Three woven pieces with untwisted fringe
Three pieces of weaving needing fringe twisting

Recently another weaver was talking about how much they loved their electric fringe twister.  I had a look on Amazon and ended up ordering a Lacis fringe twisting tool.  It was about $45 Canadian.

Electric fringe twister
Electric fringe twister out of the box

The tool uses two AA batteries.  There are two modes and you select them by pushing the button to the 1 or 2 position.  The 1 position rotates each black spindle and twists each cord separately. The 2 position rotates the entire head and twists all the strands together.  I found a short video showing these two actions online here.

Before I could get started, I needed to prepare the piece of weaving.  I selected one of the pieces of weaving and folded it in half, lining up both ends. I add a heavy book to the weaving to help keep the pieces aligned.  Next I use an open toothed comb (I think it is from the pet shop in the cat/dog tools) to untangle the warp strands.  Once the strands are combed out you can see that the length of warp left on each side is not the same.  I trim the warp threads so that both ends will have fringes of the same length.

Once the warp threads are trimmed, I move the book and reposition the weaving so there is only a single end of the weaving on the table. The book is re-positioned to weight things down and I am ready to try out the electric fringe twister.

Depressing the bottom of the black spindles opens a hook at the end and I am easily able to position a bundle of threads on the spindle. I repeat this for each of the four spindles. Then I move the button to position 1 and add twist to the strands.  Once there is enough twist, I remove two adjacent bundles from the fringe twister, tie a knot on the end, and then let them twist together. This is then repeated for the other two bundles attached to the fringe twister.  Yeah!  The first two pieces of twisted fringe are done.

Next I repeated this across the width of the weaving. When that was complete, I went back and gently trimmed the ends of each piece of fringe to tidy them up.  (Before trimming they look a bit ratty because the warp threads are different lengths.)  I rotated the weaving and repeated all these steps on the other end of the weaving.

It took me 30 minutes to complete the fringe twisting and trimming on the second end of the piece of weaving.  I do think the electric fringe twister is slightly faster than manual fringe twisting.  And it is easier on your hands as you are doing fewer repetitive movements.  So those are both very positive things.  (I did get faster and my last piece of weaving it was about 35 minutes to twist both edges and do the trimming.)

On the cons side of things… I found the fringe twister motor noise to be a bit annoying as it seems very loud. I also found that because the unit is round, that it rocks on the table.  This makes it more challenging to attach the warp bundles to the black spindles. More importantly, a few times when I hit the switch nothing happened.  I had to shake the unit to get the power to come on.  (I guess the batteries are loose, so the power connection is flaky.) It is very disappointing that a brand new unit does not function well.

After trying the electric fringe twister for the first time I give it an 8/10 rating overall.  The first night I twisted the fringe on one first piece of weaving and started work on a second piece before calling it a night.  On the next day I finished up the fringe on pieces two and three.  And I sewed a tag on the one piece that is shawl length.  The other two pieces are longer and should eventually get turned into a sewn garment of some kind.  Here they are all laid out together.  Next up for all of them is wet finishing.

Three pieces of weaving with twisted fringes
Three pieces of weaving with twisted fringe completed.