One of the most striking aspects of Dutch felter Lyda Rump’s work is her beautiful attention to texture and surface detail. At both our accessories workshop and the complex bag workshop on 5th, 6th and 7th February learn how you too can enhance your work during the actual laying out of your fibre and by embellishing your felt once it reaches the fulled stage. Including items such as stones and glass pebbles while you lay out your fibres can lead to all sorts of exciting surface possibilities which really enhance the finished felt. Layering strips of silk, artifical fabrics and other fibres on the top layer provide additional depth whilst further embellishing with stitches and small glass seed beads once the felt is fulled add interest and movement to the finished felt. On Friday 5th we will be using our imagination to create fun and stylish felt accessories with Lyda and learning all those finishing touches that go to make jewellery, scarves and other felt accessories so special. This is a great workshop if you have never felted before, come along and leave with some beautiful completed pieces! I will have wool, silk, glass nuggets and beads on hand and Lyda is bringing some of her gorgeous hand dyed silk with her. If you have been looking at some fabric or beads in your stash and are looking for inspiration about how to include them in your felt look no further! Bring everything along and if you have some glittery fabric or mesh bring it along too!! The two day complex bag workshop on Saturday and Sunday will explore the art of creating strong and beautiful multi pocketed bags and backpacks. If you are a beginner/improver and are worried that this workshop might be too advanced for you think again. Felting one of these bags is more involved than creating a piece of flat felt (that’s why they are called complex bags!) but Lyda is a brilliant teacher and I have participated in one of her workshops where an almost total beginner left with a very beautiful and perfectly felted bag. If you would like to attend either workshop places are booking up now, please contact me asap to reserve your place.
Now on to that tutorial for the simple felt slippers that I made (when waterless) to use up an old piece of felt in my stash. This project is not designed to be complicated, just an easy way of utilising a well fulled rectangle of felt and an excellent way for a beginners workshop to leave with a lovely warm and comfortable pair of slippers at the end of the day. You could paint the bottoms with Latex to make them more durable if you wanted, I get mine from Wollknoll. Measurements are fluid but just remember to cut out your felt a couple of inches bigger that you think you need to allow for the stitching. This is especially important with the width, I would have needed my piece of felt to be quite a bit bigger all round if I wanted the slippers to fit my own foot!
Divide your felt in thirds and cut as per the image.
Round the ends and stitch to close. Pinch the back together and stitch up, voila! Your first slipper!!
Oops, just lost my internet connection but back again …. in case I lose it imemdiately you can check out my Flickr images for some more pictures of the slippers in progress, even for a bad stitcher such as me they only took about 5 mins from cutting to finishing!
Oops again, lost my electricity this time ….. Just a quick not of warning, check that you have flipper the felt over before stitching your second slipper otherwise you will end up with two right feet like me!
Nicola
love them and can think of lots of ways to take this further –well done
Chrissie
http://feltingfibres.wordpress.com
Good morning Nicola,
What a cool tutorial! Love this…And the fact that it was a 5 minute sewing project…Well, that’s right up my alley:-)
Nicola, it’s a shame that you made these both for the right foot…They’d have been much more marketable were they both for the left. You know how people say, “Oh, I can’t dance, I have two left feet” 🙂
O.K., obviously I’ve not had enough coffee yet.
Hope your utilities situation is better today.
Hugs,
Dawn
Thank you so much for sharing, as always Nicola you are so generous with your skill and knowledge. I di hope you will soon be back to “normal” with your water, heat and power.
Sheila
that’s a great, but simple way to make some slippers. Even kids can do this. I have a lot of experimental thick samples which can be used for this project. Thanks Nicola!