Showing posts with label needle felting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label needle felting. Show all posts

Saturday, 5 June 2021

Woolfest Online 2021

 

Another year, another online Woolfest! 

I thoroughly enjoyed my first visit to Woolfest in Cumbria in 2019 and was really looking forward to returning last year. The Woolfest team really pulled together to host an online event in 2020 and have worked even harder to make Woolfest 2021 happen online again this year.



To visit this virtual woolly feast, be sure to join the Woolfest Facebook Group here. The Vendors taking part will post in the group throughout Friday 25th and Saturday 26th June. 
My slot is at 2.30pm on Friday 25th June.

You can visit the group anytime thereafter to see what everyone has posted although any special offers may be time dependant or first come, first served. 

If you prefer using Instagram, keep up with Woolfest on their IG page here 



Monday, 3 February 2020

Fun Felt Making Workshops

SATURDAY 22ND FEBRUARY AT 10:00 AM - 3:00 PM

FUN FELT MAKING WORKSHOP WITH AILEEN CLARKE CRAFTS



This one day workshop is a fun opportunity to try out some basic felt making techniques. It is suitable for beginners, or for those with some experience who wish to refresh or enhance their skills.
Morning
In this session you will make a wet felted flower brooch using merino and silk fibres. Learn how to form and layer three-dimensional flower shapes and how to make a felt ball for the centre.
Afternoon
The afternoon will be spent exploring dry needle felting techniques. You will learn how to apply your own design to a background. Either bring your own idea or use one ready prepared. We will work into these designs using fibres, hand stitching and beads.
Cost £50 which includes all materials, tea and coffee.
To book, please click on this Eventbrite Link

If you would prefer a half day workshop, I will be running the flower brooch workshop twice on March 14th.

SATURDAY 14TH MARCH AT 10:00 AM - 1:00 PM

FELT FLOWER BROOCH WORKSHOP WITH AILEEN CLARKE CRAFTS 



 MORNING

There are two chances to undertake this exciting three-hour workshop, led by feltmaker Aileen Clarke. This is a morning session, from 10 till 1. In this workshop you will make a wet felted flower brooch using merino and silk fibres. This includes learning how to form and layer three-dimensional flower shapes and how to make a felt ball for the centre.  You will go away with a finished piece ready to be sewn together when dry and full written instructions so you can carry on developing your skills at home.
£25 per workshop includes all materials, tea and coffee
To book, click on this Eventbrite link.

AFTERNOON


Same as above but from from 2 till 5. 
£25 per workshop includes all materials, tea and coffee
To book, click on this Eventbrite link.

Saturday, 31 August 2019

Fun Felt Making Workshop with Aileen Clarke Crafts


Join Me for a Fun Felt Making Workshop 
on
Saturday 14th September 10 – 3pm
at
Off the Rails Arthouse, Ladybank, Fife, KY15 7JT

Morning
In this workshop we will make a wet felted flower brooch using merino and silk fibres. Learn how to form and layer three-dimensional flower shapes and how to make a felt ball for the centre. 

Afternoon
The afternoon will be spent exploring dry needle felting techniques. You will learn how to apply your own design to a background. Either bring your own idea or use one ready prepared. We will work into these designs using fibres, hand stitching and beads. 
£50 includes all materials, tea and coffee. 




Friday, 10 January 2014

Needle Felting Birds, Dolphins, Seascapes and Sheep



It has been a reasonably productive first week back in the work space and I have been enjoying playing around with a few new ideas.
In my last post I showed some step by step photos of how it's possible to use Transfer Paints and Pens to put an image onto fabric which can then be needle felted into.
The Transfer Pen is great for this as it leaves a clean black line that can be 'coloured in' with fibres. I used this method to transfer this bird motif onto some handmade felt. I got the motif from a book and enlarged it slightly then worked merino fibres into the design using a single needle felting needle.



It has been difficult to get decent photos this week with the dull winter light but hopefully you can get the idea.
I will probably frame the original piece and have bookmarks made using prints of it.



I used the same technique to make this dolphin.



The background is all dry felted using hand needle felting and the embellisher machine. A little bit of machine stitch adds detail. The dolphin is all needle felted by hand with a bead for his eye.


Dolphin £65
Sold

I love this piece below (am I allowed to say that I love my own work?) Well I do love this piece as it includes all my favourite colours and I really enjoy getting lots of texture into pieces like this using the embellisher machine.
The beauty of the machine is that you are not restricted to using fibres only. I have included all sorts in this piece including an old devore velvet blouse and a cheese cloth shirt. Some vintage lace makes nice frothy waves too. I'm planning a series of pieces in this style including various framed pieces, boxes, prints and cards.


I did have to tear myself away from my 'play time' to restock my Etsy shop with some Sheep Jewellery.
These brooches are now available and I plan to add more earrings and pendants next week as well.


See the Sheep Jewellery Section of my Shop here to see what is available.


Brooches £18



Earrings £18


In other news I bought my first Smart Phone along with a Chip and Pin Card Reader last weekend so that I can take Card Payments at Craft Fairs and Events.
It has been fun getting to grips with a fancy phone (thank goodness for a teenage son!)
I took this photo with it the other morning walking back along our track. I find the interconnectedness of it all via the wifi at home a bit mind blowing. I'm so used to just using my laptop for all my online business and it's interesting to see how my blog, Facebook page and shop look on a phone. It's amazing really how much technology has come on in the past few years and how quickly we have all embraced it and take it for granted already.
I'm still at the stage of enjoying all the wee noises my phone makes when I get notifications from all the apps. I'm sure the novelty of that will wear off quite soon but did you know that the Etsy Apps goes 
Cha-Ching! when someone makes a purchase? How cool is that! It sounds like an old fashioned shop till/cash register. I love that. 





Monday, 6 January 2014

Transfer Paints and Needle Felting

One of my goals for 2014 is to get back into blogging. 2013 was a hectic year and I went from one week to the next trying to keep up with orders and commissions as well as keep up with making stock for fairs and events. I really enjoyed it all but didn't get any time to play around with any new ideas.

This month I plan to take the time to make lots of different background fabrics using wet felting and needle felting techniques as well as my embellisher machine. I also want to look back over some previous makes and rediscover some techniques that I haven't used so much recently. It would be unrealistic to think that I have time to go off in a completely new direction and I don't really want to anyway, I just want to infuse my existing range with new colours and textures and let the creative process take over to see what comes out of it.


Last year during our Open Studios North Fife event I was playing around with Transfer Paints making motifs to needle felt into.
I decided to have a little play around with this idea again last week and take photos as I went along to share here.


I used the copy function on my printer to make a few images of a doodle I had in my sketch book. I took one colour copy and a few black and white. 
I blocked in the background panels using a broad brush and turquoise and purple transfer paints on one of the black and white copies. The paints look really dull on paper but show up much brighter when ironed onto the fabric.
On one of the other copies I painted in the purple areas and the colour copy gave me a guide as to where to paint the green areas and the swirls.

I ironed the image onto synthetic white felt (the smaller piece in the middle below).
The green came out really faint but the whole point was just to give me a guide to needle felt into so it didn't matter how strong the colours came out. The background panels didn't show up very bright at all. What I discovered later is that if you use a hotter iron and press the paper for longer, the colours show up more intensely.






It was fun playing with something that is not intended as a finished piece. It really doesn't matter how things turn out when your experimenting. The whole point is to just let the creative process take over and see what comes out of it. It is also a way of getting to know how new materials work and how they can be used in other projects.


This motif could easily have been drawn out in pen but it wouldn't have been as exact. Using the paints in this way would be good for transferring a composition from a photograph onto fabric ready to needle felt or stitch. Just photocopy your image onto paper (remember to flip it in a photo editing program first if you want it to come out as you see it and not in reverse). Make a few copies and just loosely paint in the scene, iron it onto synthetic fabric and you have an image that you can work into.


I use two different gauges of needles for doing fine detail. The pink Clover needle felting tool can be handy for covering medium sized areas as it takes three normal gauge or fine gauge needles.

I started here by filling in some darker green and purple areas just using merino fibre.


I've used some lighter green and a lovely hand dyed mauve for highlights here.



Introducing a darker turquoise for the stem and filling in the leaves.



Having the motif already on the fabric really makes needling the swirls much easier.
I used small tufts of Corridale worked with a fine gauge needle for the swirls.





I'll probably go round the edges of the motif with machine stitch and add some hand stitching with thicker threads to add highlights.



My second motif worked slightly better I think. 
I'm way out of my comfort zone with these colours but the background panels worked better on this piece. You could really go mad with the background and make it fabulous before needling on the detail.


The real benefit of having the motif to work into instead of doing it free hand from your head is that you can start working tufts of fibre into the leaf area quite randomly, fill in the bulk of it quickly then neatly go around the edge. I decided to work the base fibre over the whole leaf then go back and add the contrasting colour 'free hand'.


For the swirls this time I used some hand spun yarn. It's so easy to needle it on, following the line of the pattern. For a finished piece I would probably add some couching stitches to secure everything in place but not so many as to obscure the lovely variation in colours of the yarn.



The smaller swirls will require some very fine yarn and I will use French knots for the dots. I will also work on the leaves more to get better definition and add hand stitch and beads to finish it off.

I'm aware that I haven't really been using the Transfer Paints to their full advantage here as most of the colour is hidden under the felt. Also the paints have to be ironed onto synthetic fabric which limits their use for me so I bought a Transfer Pen on ebay and I'm delighted that it works onto my own handmade felt!



I did this quick experiment using a basic motif onto a piece of felt I already had made.



You can see that the design shows up quite well and a gives a good template to work into.

I needle felted some vibrant turquoise merino fibre into the petal shapes and machine stitched around them to give definition.


I also needle felted the swirls but used satin stitch over the lilac one. I'd have to get better at doing this if I was to make finished pieces using this method.

You can see that there are lots of possibilities though. If you are planning a needle felted picture but find getting the proportions right, then using the transfer pen to get your composition onto the felt first will really help.






All contributed content © Aileen Clarke