Showing posts with label felt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label felt. Show all posts

Friday, January 9, 2015

Felted Kitty Hats

unfelted hats 2


It's not as if they needed more hats, hats are just the perfect transformative accessory and I just can't resist making them.
At all.
   So I saw this kitty bowler hat from Marks and Spencer on Pinterest and I just had to try it. My favorite yarn store, i.e. my mom, ordered the yarn from Brown Sheep and knit up the initial hats from this Fiber Trends pattern leaving the finishing to me.

unfelted hats

 If I were doing it again I would make them 1 1/2"- 2" shorter before felting, because I think they turned out long. The ears are double knitted: They look 20 stitches wide, but they are really 40. With two double pointed needles you slip every other stitch on each row so you end up with 2 knit stitch faces to your work. Every third row I slipped with the yarn forward instead of behind.

felted kitty ears knitting graph
Once the ears were sewn on and all ends hidden I threw the hats into the wash for some quick shrinkage, but I had to finish up by hand. By that time I was at my in-laws for Thanksgiving, and I found the perfect hat block: A medicine ball! It was all knobby and just the right size as I reshaped and finnessed the hats into shape.

All that was left to be done was embroidering the faces on with a chain stitch.

finished hats
 

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

My Own Bottega Veneta

Last Fall I fell in love with a bag from Bottega Veneta, and I got the fabric to do it my way.
And then I never did it. 
Yesterday I finally designed the pattern in paper and sewed it. I love the origami sensibility of the exterior. I think the lining is like an oyster and needs pearls.
If I make another one I will make it deeper and widen the handles. 

Friday, April 11, 2008

How To: Make a Silk Flower



Steve McCurry's "School Girl, Kabul, Afghanistan, 1992" with silk poppy

It is with great excitement I introduce this tutorial on how to make silk poppies. 

I first looked into silk flowers in preparation for my sister’s wedding. Poppies are her current favorite flower, and I planned to put at least one on her dress. Perhaps I was unconsciously drawing from Alexandra Posen’s sumptuous wedding dress [sorry, can't find a link!], which I saw in the Museum at FIT for I-forget-what-show. I was going for a lighter, sweeter feel than the Posen piece. At any rate, finding a suitable non-hokey poppy was a problem. Millinery level flowers were tough to find. I finally located one but it was out of my price range… deservedly so. It was beautiful.

So I set out to make my own and found no good instructions. This is probably because silk flower making is an intuitive art, and a waning one at that. So here is how I did it, and perhaps it will inspire or embolden more flower making in the wide world. These instructions are general and assume you are familiar with a variety of fiber arts. If not, I am sure you could still make do!

Materials
Scraps of silk fabric
A handful of raw wool, wool felt ball from a craft store, or small amount black velvet
Silk paints
Liquid fabric stiffener
1 skein each of 3820 and 3821 DMC floss
Dark brown wool yarn
Red sewing thread
1 cross stitch needle
1 tapestry needle
1 sewing needle

Directions


1. Choose fabrics: Because the essential nature of poppies is ephemeral and translucent, I chose to use silk charmeuse and silk chiffon. Crepe de chine would be lovely too. Satin was too heavy for this purpose but I can imagine an iris would be breathtaking!

2. Paint and dye fabrics according to dyeing instructions on bottle, if your silk wasn’t purchased in the desired color. I use Sennelier Tinfix silk paints from Dharma Trading Co. I could have gotten away with more color variation to bring out some nice lights and darks, but I didn’t dare for these.

3. The flower centers were made from felted wool balls. To make them I carded a few rollags, then tore off and rolled several bits into a ball. Dampening with hot, soapy water, I loosely rolled the ball between my hands until the fibers tightened into a tough skin on the outside. Many websites recount how to do this in more detail should you need instruction. The center for the large flower is 1 ½” in diameter, and the center for the small is 1”. Another option I considered for making the center was gathering and stuffing a circle of dark velvet. I believe that would also have worked, but I had raw wool and not velvet so I didn’t get to check. After making my ball, I dyed it a dark Van Dyk brown. 

4. Were I to do this over again I would choose two shades of DMC that weren’t so close. Although the difference can be told when you lay the skeins side by side, the shade difference is not marked in the flower. At any rate, Cut the skeins at each end and strand by strand sew them into a circle around the bottom of the wool ball. As you draw each strand through the wool and even the ends, tie the ends together so they won’t get pulled loose. Continue in this way so that there is a solid single-file line of shaggy knots around the felt ball. It looks like a monk’s tonsure, so perhaps you would like to do this while watching Brother Sun Sister Moon: “…take your time go slowly…”

 

5. Mix fabric stiffener and water 1:1. Set the little tonsured flower center face down and wet the trailing gold stamens with the solution. Allow to dry.

  6. Cut out 4 charmeuse and 4 chiffon petals. I know that real poppies possess only four petals. However, this allows them to look more blowsy than perfect. This is the annoying part: To dry the petals without making them too stiff or with shiny glue spots, I found I had to hold them in my hand. I also had good luck laying them on my arms. The texture of skin doesn’t allow them to become too smooth, while it doesn’t stick permanently either. Another method of stiffening I am eager to try is the old fashioned sugar water method by which all of those old crocheted lace angels were stiffened. I was afraid of potential shininess. To make the sugar stiffener you melt sugar over low heat in a sauce pan and add just a little water in proportion. It can be painted on, dipped, or if it is runny enough, sprayed. As you dry the petals, encourage them to curl and wave vertically.



7. Back with the center, once the stamen are dry, tie knots into them 1”-1 ¼” from the bottom. Trim with scissors above the knots. Tie in a second layer above the first. Stiffen these in quarter sections untwisting the floss and fanning it out over the felt center to dry face up. Once they are dry, trim them to the same height as the tied stamens.

8. With dark brown wool yarn and tapestry needle stitch French knots into the felt ball center for texture until you are satisfied with the density.

 

9. Pin petals to back side of felt ball center layering each chiffon petal over or underlapping a charmeuse petal, but slightly askew for an unplanned look. The four petals of poppies sit directly across from one another, almost like a four leaf clover, but beware of obsessive-compulsive perfection. It will make your flower too fake. Go for a more organic composition unless fake is your goal.

 

10. Subtly hand-baste the petals onto the felt ball staying below the stamen as much as possible.

11. If you still need more stiffness, hairspray works wonders! Sew finished flower onto garment or put a pin on it.


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