The Alderwood Quilts blog is for customers, friends and quilt enthusiasts. . Sue and her husband also own run a small lavender farm along with the quilt shop. You'll see lavender and other gardening topics, as well as knitting, recipes, photos of kids and pets.. and whatever else comes to mind.
Showing posts with label felting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label felting. Show all posts
Friday, October 29, 2010
Progress on the DWR, felting, a pattern link.
I'm working, working, working! Actually, I've been busy in the shop. We've had a lot of orders this week. But I've been working every day on the Double Wedding Ring. I have the red arcs all done- with red squares on the ends of half of them. Now I'm working on the black and whites.
One thing I've noticed is that the cutting mats will have a lifetime. Unless I miss my guess, this one will be at the end of its lifetime by the time I've finished with this quilt. They aren't very expensive, but I expected them to last a little longer than this. If you have a GO!, what has your experience been with the lifespan of the mats?
It really is mind-boggling. I've been actively working on this for about 2 weeks, and I almost have all of the pieces cut, and more than half of them stitched... for a king size Double Wedding Ring quilt! That's incredible! Without the GO!, this never would have been possible. Next week all of these pieces will start to come together and I will finally be able to have the fun of placing the arcs and intertwining the colors. I can hardly wait!
I got a lot of comments on the felted entrelac bags the other day. Thank you for all of your kind words. (blush, blush). I'm usually pretty good about citing patterns and giving links but it slipped my mind this time. I'll go back and put it in that post, and also give it here. The pattern I used is a Skill-Builder pattern by Knitability.com.
I also have a few Booga Bags. The Booga Bag pattern is free and it's a great first felting project!
This one is pretty thick. I used 2 strands of Cascade 220 wool yarn when knitting this one. I used solid dark gray, light gray, and purple, alternating, for this. To blend the colors, I started with
2 strands of dark gray for the bottom.
Then one strand of dark gray and one strand of light gray for 2 rows
Then 2 strands of light gray for several rows
Then one strand of light gray and one strand of purple for 2 rows
Then 2 strands of purple for 2 rows
Then 1 strand of purple and one strand of dark gray for 2 rows
then 2 strands of dark gray for several rows
.You get the idea. Just keep using 2 of the same color, then one of the old and one of the new colors together for 2 rows.... then 2 of the new color. It blends the colors nicely.
This is just a little one in single stranded self striping Noro Kuryon. It's thinner and lighter.
I've loved this one for several years- it looks pretty good in this photo but it's far from new-looking these days. How do you like the little "spooky eyes" fabric under the booga bags? :-)
You can also take an old wool garment (sweaters are good), and felt them. Then cut them up and use the felted wool to work with. Resale shops are a great place to find old sweaters to felt. Look for sweaters that have holes or are ripped. They're cheap.
I lifted (with permission!) these photos from another blog. AMKreations is very creative and has a nice blog. She made this clutch by felting and old sweater and lining it with a pretty batik. There's a little felted wallet in there, too. I think I need one of these. :-)
I'd like to make a felted laptop cover one of these days. You can get creative with the sweaters and use the ribbing at the waist for the flap of the bag, and use the ribbing at the cuff for pockets. The possibilities are endless. Have you made any felted items? I'd love to see them!
Another thing I'd like to do someday is felt some old sweaters that belonged to my kids when they were little. I saved some of them... not all in great shape... for this purpose. It would be one of those "Mom things" to have a felted wallet or laptop case made from a sweater or blanket that my children used. (My babies are grown men now).
I once made some felted place mats but I don't have a picture. Just felt an old sweater, then cut place mats out of them. It's that simple. You can needle felt pretty designs on it if you like.
The last felting topic is needle felting. That's a whole different ball game! One of these days I'll do some needle felting and blog about it. Gotta clear some other projects off the list first!
I have a wonderful day planned tomorrow with friends.... I'll take my camera.....
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Knitted Entrelac Backpack and Tote
I recall that about a year ago, I told you I'd talk about felting. The top photo is the finished project- small and large felted entrelac bags. The lower photo is the bags before felting. The pattern is a Skill Builder pattern by Knitability.com.
There are lots of topics under the general heading of "felting". I'll talk about all of them at some point, but right now I'd like to show you how to felt a knitted project. In a nutshell, you knit something in mega size in 100% wool, then agitate it in hot water, dry it, and you have a felted product. When it "felts", it shrinks up and the fibers become intertwined. You get a solid piece of fabric- like a wool blanket. It's great for handbags. You can actually poke holes in it or cut it with scissors and it won't unravel. It's really strong.
I love entrelac knitting. I got hooked on it a few years ago. My niece, Meredith, got me into this project. She bought a skein of all of these colors in Lamb's Pride wool yarn. She loaned me all of the yarns- you only needed a little of each one. She made a bag, then loaned me the yarns and I made 2 bags, then I gave them back to her for more projects. THANKS, MERE! These are photos of the knitted bags before felting. Look closely- there are 2 bags... my hand is on the top left for scale in the above photo.
This is a closeup of the bags before felting.
Most of us have accidentally felted something at some time in our lives. That's when you take a favorite sweater and turn it into a Barbie doll outfit when you think you're using cold water in the washer but it's actually on hot/hot. 100% Wool (and some other natural fibers) shrink when agitated in warm water. You can felt a project in a washing machine, or by hand. When you felt by hand, you can just agitate it with your hands (or a wooden spoon or spatula). You can also boil it, but not unless it's a solid color. Otherwise- it will all kinda turn to a muddy color. I know.
You can also do some felting with a steam iron. The steam will felt wool, but without agitation, it will take more time at the iron that I want to spend. It would be a good option for very minor felting or for delicate wool.
Be forewarned- if you felt in a washing machine, you should put the item in some sort of bag- I like using pillow cases. If you don't do this- you will become best friends with your plumber. The bag contains the blobs of wool and keeps them out of your plumbing. It also protects the item you're felting from attracting other fibers which can become embedded (felted) into your project. I know this, too. When you agitate the item, you do this by throwing something tough in with it- like old jeans. The first time I felted something, I threw in some old towels and didn't put it in a pillow case. My DARK knitted bag ended up with white fibers (from the towels) permanently embedded into it.
You CAN felt in a front loader washing machine, but the results can be unpredictable. I prefer using a top loader. I have a front loader. I sometimes go to a laundromat, and sometimes I beg someone with a top loader to let me play in their laundry room.
My felting bag is an old pillow case that I put a zipper into. Works great. I put a very small amount of detergent into the washer and filled it with very hot water- then put it on the super duper cycle (or whatever your washer calls it). Basically- treat it rough. I keep pulling it out, opening the zipper and looking at it until it's the size I want. Every time I pull it out, I use my fingers to shape and flatten areas that might be "rolling" or looking mis-shaped.
This is after felting. Now they need to dry. You're supposed to air dry them. Sometimes (shhh.. don't tell the felt police) I put them, in the pillow case, in the dryer to get the drying started. I don't leave the item in the dryer until it's finished drying- I just leave it in there long enough to get it past the really wet stage. Put them over a form or stuff them if possible. I made a large bag and 2 smaller ones. The small ones are stuffed with small towels and the larger one is laying on the right. It's too big to stand up and I couldn't find anything to invert it over.
Here are the little ones.
And this is the big one all finished after drying for several days.
I used a heavy webbing for the straps.
The small bags have holes knitted into it for the straps. I kept opening them up as it was felting. For the large bag, I inserted grommets. It will hold more weight.
The grommets are all around the top and there are 2 closer to the bottom.
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Here's the finished small neutral bag. I used Noro Kuryon yarn for it. It's self-striping yarn so the colors just changed like that using one skein.
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