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

Friday, 30 October 2015

Felt-Ed Kit Club 2016


I'm so excited to be talking to you about my felt kit club.  I've been planning it for months and finally I'm ready to launch! To be honest, it sometimes felt like I was never going to be ready but I'm so pleased to be able to tell you that I am!

I love making felt and I want to share it with everyone - in fact, I'd love to teach the world to felt! It's such an amazing art form and anyone can do it regardless of age or ability. The kit club is a great way to learn how to make felt whilst creating 12 fabulous projects throughout 2016.

When you sign up, you'll receive a basic felting kit complete with a small bamboo mat, bubble wrap, a spray bottle, soap and a bag to keep it all in then, every month, you'll receive a kit with everything you need, including a link to a video tutorial, to create a great project. 

Each kit is a surprise you can be certain you will love it just as much as I do and they're suitable for children and adults alike! They make a great Christmas gift, or a little treat for yourself! 

Sign ups launch on Friday 6th November at 9am and to make sure you don't miss out you need to sign up to my mailing list using the link on the right hand side of this page (there might even be a little discount code when reminder goes out!) 

Wednesday, 9 September 2015

What is felt?


Simply put, felt is a fabric.  It can be both soft and hard, flat or sculptural, it can be made in a variety of ways and produce a wide range of items.  It is marvellous and I just adore making it.

When I made my first ever piece of felt on day 1 of the Foundation Felt course at Artybird Carnforth, my tutor, Kate, told us that by the end of the year we wouldn't know how to make felt, and she was right!  In that first year, I learnt so many ways to create it that I didn't know just 1 way but a wide range of techniques to create different types of felt, using different types of fibre and for a range of different purposes.

Felt is predominantly made using wool (although other fibres can be used depending on your technique).  There are hundreds of different breeds of sheep in the World, each producing fibre with different characteristics and therefore requiring different techniques to felt.  

There are 2 main ways to make felt:  wet felting and needle felting.  

Wet felting uses water, soap and agitation to create a felted fabric whereas needle felting uses a barbed needle to stab and mesh the fibres together. I'm not going to go into detail here about how each technique works, we'll save that for another post!

Felt is an amazing textile to create and work with and holds so many possibilities for creating pictures, sculptures and everyday items and I never tire of making it.


If you enjoyed reading this post, then you can sign up to my mailing list here to keep up-to-date with the latest Felt-Ed news.

Tuesday, 25 August 2015

Welcome to Felt-Ed

I'm very excited to be blogging as Felt-Ed.  For my first post, I thought I'd tell you a little bit about me, Felt-Ed and what you can hope to find here on the blog and on my website 

Who is Felt-Ed?

 
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Felt-Ed is me, Sarah Jones, a textile artist specialising in felt making. I am also a qualified primary school teacher and have worked in nurseries, primary schools and within the community learning sector.  I completed my Level 1 City and Guilds in Creative Textiles, where I achieved a distinction, back in 2013, and have just completed my Level 3 Certificate in Feltmaking.  I'm looking forward to starting my next course in Textile Embellishment in September. 

What is Felt-Ed?

Felt-Ed is the place to go for resources, workshops and felt-making kits for children and the education sector. Here on the blog, you can expect to find interesting and informative articles about felt making and the teaching of art whilst over on my website, you'll find kits, lesson plans and other downloadable resources. Combining my love of felt making, with my knowledge and experience of teaching, I'm going to be sharing the fabulous art of felt making with everyone.

How did Felt-Ed begin? 


Felt-Ed started out as a part of The Gingerbread Bunny.  Back in June 2014, I worked with Lowton Junior and Infant School in Wigan on a large, felt wall hanging for their new entrance.  During the week long project, every child in the school was involved.  It was such an amazing experience and I knew, from that moment, that sharing felt making with as many children as I could was my mission.  

Over the following year, I worked in a further 7 schools in Wigan, Chorley, Bolton and Warrington - some for large scale projects, others for half day workshops as part of arts weeks - each was marvellous and we created some wonderful felt art based on gardens, flowers, the sea and even Lowry.  

I've decided to separate out my work with schools and the education sector so that I can continue to develop it into something exciting and informative.