Buciki cudne;) Autorką kursu jest Katerina Ketova Wycinamy szablon. Jeśli używamy cienkiej wełny szablon powinien być większy od wielkości bucika o około 40%,jeśli wełna jest grubsza,to szablon powinien być większy o około 30-35% Kładziemy cienką warstwę na szablonie,naddając około 1.5 do 2 cm . Układamy wzdłuż szablonu Druga warstwę układamy prostopadle do pierwszej Trzeba pamiętać o w miarę równych grubościach wełny Trzecia warstwa idzie wzdłuż szablonu Po nałożeniu trzech warstw,zalewamy wszystko gorącą wodą z mydłem. Niestety nie wiem skąd można wytrzasnąć taki wałek:) Można sobie ułatwić pracę Taka maszyna w ciągu 15 sekund zrobi takie postępy Bez tego,niestety trzeba wałkować dużo dłużej. Ja nie znam się na filcowaniu,ale kiedyś widziałam,że można położyć pracę na bambusową matę,zwinąć i rolować. Wystające brzegi zawinąć zgodnie z szablonem Nakładamy kolejne 3 warstwy,tak jak poprzednio;wzdłuż,wszerz,wzdłuż Moczymy,wyciskamy ,nakładamy folię,filcujemy Odwracamy i zakładamy marginesy Nakładamy 3 zielone warstwy Filcujemy Odwracamy i znów 3 warstwy zielonej wełny Potem wszystko traktujemy maszyną,lub męczymy się ręcznie Nakładamy wzorek i znów ,,maltretujemy" Wycinamy otworki na stópki,niestety a oko,zaczynając od najmniejszego otworku. Wyciągamy szablon Masujemy wewnątrz bucika i w miejscu wycięcia jakie to łatwe się wydaje;))) Uff;))) Jak to wszystko pięknie na zdjęciach wygląda:) Ja mam dwa kolory wełny i normalnie chyba spróbuję wymęczyć takie bucisze;) A co mi tam;)) papa;)
Bożena Podlasińska filcowanie na mokro filc artystyczny rękodzieło felt art
Pakiet kursów wideo zawierający: podstawy filcowania na mokro biżuterii, podstawy filcowania na sucho na przykładzie aplikacji na ubraniach, kurs o łączeniu obu technik i kurs o tworzeniu biżuterii z półfabrykatów jubilerskich. Kursy prowadzi Justyna Wróbel-Mikołajczyk
Weź udział w II edycji Warsztatów (online) Podstaw Filcowania. Przerobimy wspólnie 10 kursów filcowania na mokro i sucho. Ruszamy 15 września.
Felting step by step - video courses and tutorials
Weź udział w darmowym wyzwaniu i naucz się jak rozkładać wełnę, aby Twoje filcowe rękodzieło było takie jakie chcesz, a nie takie, jakie Ci wyjdzie
Ingredients needed: Watered-down Dawn dish washing liquid. There's no special ratio. Add just enough water to make the liquid thin and ...
Felting step by step - video courses and tutorials
Sie suchen nach einer detaillierten Anleitung und Ideen für Kinder zum Thema Nassfilzen? Hier finden Sie den Grundkurs: Nassfilzen mit wichtigen Tipps.
#фактуры_войлок@sherstyanika_art подборка из интернета
Felting step by step - video courses and tutorials
Felting step by step - video courses and tutorials
Felting step by step - video courses and tutorials
There's a craft technique I recently learned about I hadn't heard of before, nuno felting. I had to get curious about how this creative process worked!
More here: www.elizabeth-armstrong.blogspot.com
Nuno felting is a technique developed in 1994 by the textile artists Polly Stirling and Sachiko Kotaka. By manipulating a small amount of wool fiber through a base fabric, they learned they could create a felted fabric with characteristics quite different from traditional felt. Nuno felt is thin, lightweight and drapeable. A similar process to wet wool felting, Nuno felting brings 2 different materials together to create a whole new textured fabric. While I was in Tucson for the Crystallized workshops, one class that I attended was Nuno felting. Follow along with my how-to photos to make some of your own! Step 1: start out with a base fabric (silk organza) a bit larger than the desired shape and size (the final product will shrink). Lay out a towel to keep your surface area dry and bubble wrap with bubbles face-up. Step 2: place a thin layer of merino wool roving over the base fabric using a shingling method (overlapping each section slightly) Experiment with designs. Step 3: place a piece of tulle over the entire piece. Step 4: Sprinkle the piece with a water and olive oil soap mixture. We used empty plastic bottles with sprinkle holes in the cap for the water mixture. Use your hands to pat the mixture into the piece. note: the piece should not be drenched with water, just slightly showered. Monica came around with an exterminator spray container and misted each of our pieces. She uses this when she is making many pieces at once. Step 5: with a styrofoam pool noodle cut down to size, loosely roll the piece up—the bubble wrap, base fabric, roving and tulle. Step 6: secure the roll around the noodle—we tied it up with panty hose. Step 7: roll on a flat surface, starting with both hands to elbows and back, about 100 times. Step 8: unroll and lift up the tulle to check the piece. The roving should have started to connect to the base fabric. Step 9: roll everything back up tightly this time and roll 100 times again. Step 10: Repeat steps 8 & 9. Step 11: after about 300 rolls, the piece should be almost completely connected to the silk organza. The final "felting" step is to lay the entire piece out, and with a more concentrated oil olive soap/ water mixture, sprinkle on and rub soap and fibers against the bubble wrap. The back side on the base fabric should begin to ripple when the roving is completely attached. Step 12: when complete, it should resemble this texture. Delicately rinse the piece under running water and soak in a vinegar/water solution for 15 minutes. Step 13: hang dry. Monica and Pat, the wonderful Nuno felt instructors, wearing their handmade scarves!
Nu när det har blivit kyligare kan det vara skönt med ett par tovade handledsvärmare. I somras fick vi besök av min kompis Carin med familj, och Carin och jag brukar försöka hinna tova något när vi…
Nuno felting is a technique developed in 1994 by the textile artists Polly Stirling and Sachiko Kotaka. By manipulating a small amount of wool fiber through a base fabric, they learned they could create a felted fabric with characteristics quite different from traditional felt. Nuno felt is thin, lightweight and drapeable. A similar process to wet wool felting, Nuno felting brings 2 different materials together to create a whole new textured fabric. While I was in Tucson for the Crystallized workshops, one class that I attended was Nuno felting. Follow along with my how-to photos to make some of your own! Step 1: start out with a base fabric (silk organza) a bit larger than the desired shape and size (the final product will shrink). Lay out a towel to keep your surface area dry and bubble wrap with bubbles face-up. Step 2: place a thin layer of merino wool roving over the base fabric using a shingling method (overlapping each section slightly) Experiment with designs. Step 3: place a piece of tulle over the entire piece. Step 4: Sprinkle the piece with a water and olive oil soap mixture. We used empty plastic bottles with sprinkle holes in the cap for the water mixture. Use your hands to pat the mixture into the piece. note: the piece should not be drenched with water, just slightly showered. Monica came around with an exterminator spray container and misted each of our pieces. She uses this when she is making many pieces at once. Step 5: with a styrofoam pool noodle cut down to size, loosely roll the piece up—the bubble wrap, base fabric, roving and tulle. Step 6: secure the roll around the noodle—we tied it up with panty hose. Step 7: roll on a flat surface, starting with both hands to elbows and back, about 100 times. Step 8: unroll and lift up the tulle to check the piece. The roving should have started to connect to the base fabric. Step 9: roll everything back up tightly this time and roll 100 times again. Step 10: Repeat steps 8 & 9. Step 11: after about 300 rolls, the piece should be almost completely connected to the silk organza. The final "felting" step is to lay the entire piece out, and with a more concentrated oil olive soap/ water mixture, sprinkle on and rub soap and fibers against the bubble wrap. The back side on the base fabric should begin to ripple when the roving is completely attached. Step 12: when complete, it should resemble this texture. Delicately rinse the piece under running water and soak in a vinegar/water solution for 15 minutes. Step 13: hang dry. Monica and Pat, the wonderful Nuno felt instructors, wearing their handmade scarves!
It is said that good things come to those that wait or in my case asked. I asked Kim of Wildly Woolly to make up a little tutorial showing her Easy way to make Felted Balls and she did. Kim i…
I wrote about making lanterns with felted wool a year ago, and as I am making some this year (as opposed to helping children make them) I thought I would give an update on the process, and see if I left any glaring holes in my non-instructions. (For the real deal, please see the archived Living Crafts magazine; I'm sure there are some stunning photos as well to encourage you as you wrangle your wool.) First, I will say that there is a learning curve here. I asked Eliza to join me in my endeavors today and she said, "Mom. I thought that project was, well...a little tedious." There you have it. I have reached the zen of the art of felting wool lanterns, but the path was trying and maybe a little tedious. First I did a lot of things wrong and made a lumpy bumpy holey squiggly lantern. To avoid this particular problem, I would first suggest assembling all of your materials from the start, so that you don't find yourself with water running down your forearms and dripping off your elbows as you scramble for another length of wool. Or hollering for one of your daughters to come help you with the scissors 'cause you're afraid to let go of your precariously wooled balloon. Ah, here we go - materials. You will need: a balloon - I am enjoying using balloons that are approximately between 4 and 8 inches in diameter, but you could go bigger. The lantern will shrink some while you felt it. a spray bottle with cold water access to hot-ish water and dish soap (I used the grungy tub below, with a couple drops of soap and kept the bottle on hand for some additional dosing of the wool) lengths of wool roving that has been carded, gently teased out to a couple inches wide. Depending on the size of the balloon, you will need 3 - 6 or so of these. 3 yards (not, um, 3 feet, as I mistakenly used for my first attempt) of WOOL yarn (not, um, acrylic, as I mistakenly used for my first attempt) a towel or two to clean up from all the drips. the fancy studio space Based on my weak memory and the notes I had, this is what I did: Blow up your balloon. Make awful face at the taste of the thing but press on. Spray lightly with the cold water. Holding the tie of the balloon, wrap each length of wool around the balloon, being sure to cross pieces and covering as many holes as possible. Spray as needed to encourage the wool to stay in place, but don't get it so wet that it droops off like a soggy diaper. Please trust me on this. While holding your balloon carefully aloft in such a way that nothing falls off of it, wrap the piece of wool yarn you thankfully cut ahead of time around and around the balloon, again trying to criss-cross as much as possible. The idea here is to hold the wool in place and it does a marvelous job, thank goodness. Now you begin the very precise method of water felting called the "dribble pat pat". Taking fingersful of hot, lightly-soaped water from your tub, dribble and pat your way around your balloon. Don't smear or push or rub just yet. I developed a technique I call "drumming the fingers", and I do just that, lightly, all around the balloon. And then I cheat and add some drops of soap directly onto the wool itself - just a little, mind you, but enough to make the stuff start sticking like it's supposed to. Dribble pat pat. Drum drum drum. Coax the wool over any bald spots. What's happening here is the fibers are starting to mesh together and the material is starting to resemble something like felt, or the promise of felt. Then I start getting a little crazy, once I'm pretty certain nothing is going to really move in any disastrous way, and I drum with my whole hands, bouncing the balloon between them, clapping both sides of the balloon. Then you can start rubbing it between your hands, or against some bubblewrap if you have some handy (better have gotten it when your hands were free, or you'll have to make do). Ah, here's a picture of the lumpy bumpy - still, not bad for not really remembering clearly how to do this, but my major mistakes here were a) too much dribble - made for soggy wool that kind of clumped instead of meshing and b) I used a beautiful red acrylic yarn, and only one yard of it, which wasn't enough to help hold on the wool and didn't shrink along with the wool as it is supposed to. The final result is endearing and the loose yarn makes some lovely squiggles, but it didn't turn out the way it was supposed to, you see. It looks more like a retired hat or something. Once your wool all looks like it's of a piece - like it's felt, and there are no wisps left and it is going to stay together if you let go - then you can pop your balloon. You'll have something like what you see below. Now gently squash it, top to bottom, and gently rub. And rub. And fold and rub. And massage. And the longer you do it the more vigorous you can get. You are further felting. I would just suggest that you check it once in a while to make sure that you are not doing such an awesome job that you've felted the top right onto the bottom - I had a bit of a scare on that one. Roll it into a sausage and massage. Fold it in thirds and massage. Watch some TV and massage it, though that might go against everything you thought you knew about felting. What can I say, Helena Bonham Carter as the Queen of Hearts with her "jabberbabywocky", I was drawn. When you are really quite done with the whole thing it is time to rinse in as hot a hot water as you can manage. Here you are further shrinking your piece and rinsing out the soap you used earlier. (There must be a reason to not use too much soap - it makes the job SO much easier, but I think maybe you don't want to wash out all the lanolin? Perhaps that's what makes wool burn so slowly? This is just a guess on my part - I can't find anything about it on the interwebs. But even so...use as little soap and as much patience as possible, that might be the way to go.) You're almost done! Now you can put another balloon in the shell to give it some shape as it dries, or stuff it with bubblewrap, towels, or rags. I set mine on our floor vents with balloons in them, and they dried quickly. pre-drying - looks like a verrrry small beret. It is all still very much worth the effort. So warming, and so beautiful...
Weź udział w II edycji Warsztatów (online) Podstaw Filcowania. Przerobimy wspólnie 10 kursów filcowania na mokro i sucho. Ruszamy 15 września.
Felting step by step - video courses and tutorials