Christmas is the perfect occasion to make little bits of
inconsequence and sell them off at the School Fair. A crowd of tinselly
owls has gathered on my dining room table over the past month, and now they
have been joined by elves, robins, snowmen, gingerbread men and santas. I have
taken my life in my hands and been at work with the viciously barbed felting
needles.
The felting needle close up. |
Here comes Santa Claus. The wool fibres before I get needling. |
The fibres tamed into a ball. This tool contains 4 needles and is good for starting a model. |
Needle felting is perfect for making Christmas decorations.
It is possible to make tiny shapes like a snowman’s carrot nose and attach it
without sewing or glue. It leaves an
attractive fuzzy surface, and you can easily add soft wisps of wool for scarves
and Santa’s beard. Pompoms can be needled securely into the felt, relieving
the need for the dreaded invisible thread.
Santa and one of his elves, watched over by the baleful eye of a tinsel owl. |
I had a surplus of polystyrene balls left over from another Grand
Project, so I have used these as a base for heads and bodies. The wool is
stabbed directly into the polystyrene. The trickiest part of making a character is
always the eyes, so I’ve tried out a variety of methods. It’s possible to
needle felt in tiny circles of wool, but hard to get a neat result. I also used
pompom eyes and stick-on boggly eyes,
but my favourites are tiny round black beads, either sewn or glued on (very
fiddly, either way!)
The Christmas Fair is on Friday, so this rather drunken crew will
soon be off to their stall. I’ve enjoyed having them sitting around on
the table – but let’s hope they don’t suffer the indignity of coming back
unsold!
I just had to make a squirrel! This little chap is one inch high, and he will be staying with me. |
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