Okay this is so much work, I feel like I might experiment with this occasionally, but oh wow I appreciate handmade wool makers and I will respect higher pricing more, this worth a lot of time, technic and physical strength.I hope people see this throughout even if they don’t intend on trying it themselves right now, this is incredible.
haha amen! Though the time can be passed by watching a show or listening to an audiobook for example. So while it does take a while to felt and full something, your mind can at least do other things.
It really is and tp make a full size scarf you need a huge space because it shrinks a lot my kitchen table makes like half a scarf so i have to have a big length of plastic and prop it up to do parts at a time. Also even laying the fabriic down takes the whole of my bedroom floor and then the kitchen gets covered in soapy water. Its a lot of arm work too even with short cuts ive learned.
I'm sad to say I'm a great big fat lazy American slob I go and I buy sweaters and I wash them in hot water and I dry them in the dryer and they automatically felt into something too little to fit me eventually and sometimes I cut the belly band off of wine and the arms off of the other and so it all together to make a longer sweater then when I get done abusing the wall it's completely felt it and I cut it in strips and crochet with it and it makes a really super warm pair of slippers for somebody with cancer or something
I've watched many RUclipsrs teaching wool felting over the years but I think I've just found my new favourite. Your clear, easy to follow techniques are so beneficial to me because I have cognition issues due to fibromyalgia. Thank you so much for making my new felting journey so much easier than it would have been. ❤❤❤
Bwahhhha, I began a wet felting project of a poncho, before actually learning how to do it! This video was great. I think I can save my poncho with your how-to help. 🤞🏻
I've watched so many videos that were on fast forward without explanation. Your video is amazing because you explain it clearly. It's personable and inviting without an ongoing blathering effect. Thank you for your expressive simplicity. 👍 I subscribed. 😁
Thank you! Im going to show my kids how to make some ancient world maps/landscapes our of felt (to play on with their legos and such afterwards) as part of their their homeschool history lessons! (First grade and Preschool) - knowing how much these felt-scapes shink, and seeing all the folding,throwing,rolling techniques for them to choose from is great, thank you!!!
I know it's been a year, but I just discovered felting in general in May, and I wet felted my first piece today after work, watching this video. Thank you SO MUCH for putting this on RUclips. It was a lot of fun and my Rainbow High doll will have a wool cape now. I hope to make a bigger piece soon.
Thank you for this! I'm in want of no kill sheepskin rugs, and wet felting was mentioned as a good way to make a rug backing. Even if my rugs don't work out, I know I've found a fun third way to make woollen fabrics (the other two being knitting and weaving)
I appreciated that you explained *why* you do some of the steps. I've done a beginners class, but definitely learned some new "basics" here. Thank you.
Thank you for this clear explanation on how to wet-felt. I am planning to incorporate it in a painting. When it’s done, I will show you the result and making off video. Good luck with your channel. 🙏
I once worked with this designer that made all of her garments out of fabrics we made with this technique, it was craaaazy at the time but now I really want to try it again for my own projects, it's such a nice way to limit our footprint in the textile industry by finding ways to create our own fabrics.
Very informative, thank you! I am new to needle felting and I wanted to investigate wet felting as I would like to make thin wings on needle felted insects
I watched a video of a girl who spread the wool out REALLY thin, then used the warm soapy water to make the wool stick together! I did not understand that wool's natural characteristic is that the hair has millions of scales on it that actually , once you slime the wool all around together , it cannot help but cling to each other, like a gang. You , calculate the thickness and then the magic begins by it's all bonded together, naturally. You can make a quilt top out of it and stitch all over it , sewing the wool to the cotton batting. The surface of the wool all blended together in different colors or monochromatic is SO warm , but it's so thin !! Wool is weighted, warm yet can be thin enough to be a nice blanket or scarf summer or winter. Cozy!!
yeah wool super versatile, I love working with it! And yes, the reason wool felts is because the little of barbs all around the fiber. When you add heat, moisture, or soap, it opens those barbs, allowing them to interlock, causing felting.
My mother wet felted a lot, so much that she and a friend could sell things at local markets (she had another day job, though). She did all kinds of things; socks, boots, hats, bags, and whatnot. No technique was as time consuming as the ones shown here.
New subscriber here!!!🎉i am also new to felting but I’m hooked. Wet felting is interesting. I never realized how much work goes into it. Great video! Thank you.
You can add as many layers as you'd like! But definitely work in 2's so that you have a layer in each direction. Otherwise it will shrink more in the direction with fewer layers.
I found this tutorial really helpful. Thank you. I went to a craft day out, tutorial thing, where I left with a piece of unfelted felt. They said to look on you tube to finish it. I really love the colours you've used. It turned out beautiful. Have you got any plans for it?
Aw that sounds fun, hope you're able to finish your piece! Glad you found this helpful! No plans yet for mine, will likely cut it up into a project at some point.
Instead of mesh fabric I used a plastic over it, I rolled it so many times but wool stick to a plastic, is it too much water or too little olive soap ? Or because it’s not mesh ? Thank you
Would you use the same soap and vinegar on acrylic felting or would this technique not work for that? I can't handle wool typically since it makes me itchy but I have been able to use alpaca so far. I wasn't wanting to test this with alpaca though. This video makes wet felting look like so much fun, I got most of the supplies but no space for this YET :/
Generally acrylic will not felt as it doesn't have the same fiber properties. Alpaca, however, is a type of wool so will felt. The softer the wool, though, the more difficult it is to felt. The reason it's soft is because the barbs along the fiber strands aren't as pronounced - these barbs are what interlock to felt the fiber together.
@@ABCrafty I did felt acrylic for eyes and mouth that I added to a crochet project that I brushed out the yarn since I posted this, it wasn't wet felted but it felted pretty well for what I attempted. At least as well as the cheapo starter bundle kit I got for supplies that had a few grams of wool to start with. Plus I didn't have red tips or itchy skin so perks :D Does merino wool work though for felting that seems to have the least reaction to me so far. I'm still working through figuring out which fibers I react to >.< I will say that fiber strands didn't want to hold as easily but I just twisted the acrylic yarn over it so it had a crisscross effect so it was easier to felt together. I did look up pointers for working with acrylic felt but this video actually made me want to felt instead of just to add to my crochet :P
Just watched this and the mini hat video. Do you show how to make actual size adult hats anywhere? We have sheep and I want to do this for a gift for my fiancé.
Thank you for a really good video. This may be an odd question but I am looking to make wet felted raw fleece to use as a weed suppressant in the garden. I am not really finding much about this but used loose raw wool and worked well except most blew away ( I am in an exposed coastal place). Do you think I could use these techniques to make a weed mat? I would like to use raw as the manky goodness will seep out to the ground as it breaks down. :)
You want to be very delicate when working with the silk - barely touching it. It can also help to put some wisps of wool over the silk to help it adhere.
Hey loved the tutorial. Thank you. Im new to dry felting but I will go back to this video when starting wet felting. One question: 25 rolls for each side or 1 roll is "up and down"?
Thanks, glad you liked it! It's best explained at 3:54. When you wrap it up in the towel, you roll a total of 100 times. After 25 rolls, give the "log" a quarter turn. This way you roll it evenly. Then unwrap everything, flip the pool noodle to the opposite side and repeat. Then repeat 2 more times so the pool noodle starts at all four sides of the project. Then flip the project over and do it all over again. So it's 100x from the left, 100x from the right, 100x from the top, 100x from the bottom. Then flip the project over and repeat.
Doing it by hand, you control the direction of the shrinkage. A washing machine will absolutely help shrink it down, but it may not be the outcome you'd like. In some cases it may be fine, but if you want to control the dimensions, it makes sense to do it by hand.
Yes, you absolutely can use room temperature water. It will simply take longer to felt and full your project. The hot water helps because it expands the fibers, allowing them to more easily entangle with the other fibers. Room temperature water won't expand them as much so you have to provide more agitation, which should be done over a longer period of time versus more aggressively - otherwise you'll rough up the fibers.
I personally like to work with merino wool. The amount I used to make this fabric was very little - probably around 0.1 oz in total and then the added embellishments. I have links to some of my favorite wool and embellishments in the description. Let me know if you have any other questions! :D
Nicely done and explained. I will recommend this, however, for beginners, I would remove all the fancy fibres and just have them create the fabric first. It's not so intimidating this way and encourages them to push further with extra goodies. Just my experience speaking.
Okay this is so much work, I feel like I might experiment with this occasionally, but oh wow I appreciate handmade wool makers and I will respect higher pricing more, this worth a lot of time, technic and physical strength.I hope people see this throughout even if they don’t intend on trying it themselves right now, this is incredible.
haha amen! Though the time can be passed by watching a show or listening to an audiobook for example. So while it does take a while to felt and full something, your mind can at least do other things.
I just made a felted bowl...it took about an hour. Very cool and very clean hands now...smile.
It really is and tp make a full size scarf you need a huge space because it shrinks a lot my kitchen table makes like half a scarf so i have to have a big length of plastic and prop it up to do parts at a time. Also even laying the fabriic down takes the whole of my bedroom floor and then the kitchen gets covered in soapy water. Its a lot of arm work too even with short cuts ive learned.
I'm sad to say I'm a great big fat lazy American slob I go and I buy sweaters and I wash them in hot water and I dry them in the dryer and they automatically felt into something too little to fit me eventually and sometimes I cut the belly band off of wine and the arms off of the other and so it all together to make a longer sweater then when I get done abusing the wall it's completely felt it and I cut it in strips and crochet with it and it makes a really super warm pair of slippers for somebody with cancer or something
@@markmcgoveran6811 jesus girl buy yourself some acrylic sweaters.
I've watched many RUclipsrs teaching wool felting over the years but I think I've just found my new favourite. Your clear, easy to follow techniques are so beneficial to me because I have cognition issues due to fibromyalgia. Thank you so much for making my new felting journey so much easier than it would have been. ❤❤❤
Thanks so much!!
It's long but it's soothing and fun.
Watch a movie while you're making the wool fabric.
It's also satisfying.
Right now, thanks to this video I am making a bowl for my husbands office. I also think making a patch work pillow out of felted squares would be fun.
Aw that's great! I'd love to see it when it's done!
@@ABCrafty It came out well for a first try.
Bwahhhha, I began a wet felting project of a poncho, before actually learning how to do it! This video was great. I think I can save my poncho with your how-to help. 🤞🏻
oh wow, ambitious! The largest thing I've made so far is a witch hat. I'm glad my tutorial will help! I'd love to see your poncho when it's done
This is so cool!! New hobby unlocked!
I've watched so many videos that were on fast forward without explanation. Your video is amazing because you explain it clearly. It's personable and inviting without an ongoing blathering effect. Thank you for your expressive simplicity. 👍
I subscribed. 😁
oh my gosh, thank you so much! I am all about making concise videos because that's my preference as well. So glad you found it helpful!
Thank you! Im going to show my kids how to make some ancient world maps/landscapes our of felt (to play on with their legos and such afterwards) as part of their their homeschool history lessons! (First grade and Preschool) - knowing how much these felt-scapes shink, and seeing all the folding,throwing,rolling techniques for them to choose from is great, thank you!!!
I know it's been a year, but I just discovered felting in general in May, and I wet felted my first piece today after work, watching this video. Thank you SO MUCH for putting this on RUclips. It was a lot of fun and my Rainbow High doll will have a wool cape now. I hope to make a bigger piece soon.
Aw yay, so glad it was helpful! I'd love to see the cape you made!
I can’t even begin to describe how helpful you have been thank you a thousand times!
oh my gosh, so glad you found it helpful! Let me know if you have any questions or want to see other types of felting tutorials!
Awesome! I have 2 pet sheep and just enough materials about the house to try this. Thank you for showing me how. Heart thanks!
oh wow definitely jealous! You'll get some gorgeous projects!
I love wet felting all the neat fibers
Thank you for this! I'm in want of no kill sheepskin rugs, and wet felting was mentioned as a good way to make a rug backing. Even if my rugs don't work out, I know I've found a fun third way to make woollen fabrics (the other two being knitting and weaving)
it looks so beautiful like moss!!
Thank you!
Thankyou for uploading this first class tutorial. ❤
You're welcome 😊
Loved this! Thank you!! And this has such pretty colors and embellishments. I'd love to learn how to do this to make hats!
Oh that was mesmerising, thank you. I have never done it but now rushing off to Hobbycraft!
Wow - I make felted slippers but they are knit from 100% wool. I am definitely going to try wetfelting.
I appreciated that you explained *why* you do some of the steps. I've done a beginners class, but definitely learned some new "basics" here. Thank you.
This is so helpful. I wasnt sure about when to soap and embellish. Very clear and helpful tutorial, thankyou!
Thank you for this clear explanation on how to wet-felt. I am planning to incorporate it in a painting. When it’s done, I will show you the result and making off video. Good luck with your channel. 🙏
Lovely video with clear instructions. Thank you
Thanks! Glad you liked it!
This is SO helpful! Today I'm starting a little wet-felting adventure. Thanks for all these great tips.
I'm so glad you enjoyed it!
This is actually like your best video and its very good
Thanks!
I once worked with this designer that made all of her garments out of fabrics we made with this technique, it was craaaazy at the time but now I really want to try it again for my own projects, it's such a nice way to limit our footprint in the textile industry by finding ways to create our own fabrics.
Excellent, concise and informative video. I'm ready to go! Thank you 😊
This reminds my of processing film photos!
My go to video! Thank you. Very good teaching. ❤
Thanks, so glad you like it!
Perfect pace of narration
Thank you! I'm always concerned I may be going too quickly, but I personally prefer succinct content so I pace them that way.
This was a great tutorial!
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed it!
What an incredibly detailed video!! I cannot wait to try this technique!
Thanks so much, glad you liked it!
Super easy to learn the process! Thanks!
Glad you found it helpful! I would love to see what you end up making!
Clear and concise, thank you!
Thanks! Glad you liked it!
Great tutorial, thanks. I would appreciate it if you could show us how to make a scarf with the same style of random placement of wool or felt please?
Thanks, glad you like it! I can definitely look into a doing a scarf!
Very informative, thank you! I am new to needle felting and I wanted to investigate wet felting as I would like to make thin wings on needle felted insects
Glad you found it helpful! I love that idea, combing the two (wet felting and needle felting) always makes for great finished pieces
Same here, thank you
sooo helpful i definitely wanna try this for a stool cushion
Glad you found it helpful! Be sure to felt it thoroughly so it's as durable as possible.
I love your work and your explanation. In few minutes you brinda me a lot of ideas, I'm so thankful for that. ❤
Thanks so much! Glad I could inspire :D
Great tutorial!
Thank you!
Beautiful
i would love to make a medicine bag... i love your video and going to look at your blog now
Thanks! I'd love to see it when you make it!
Boot covers! I’m trying to make covers for Tinkerbell shoes!
Ooo that'd be neat. I've actually made elf shoes and plan to make a full tutorial for that.
Excellent ! Clear about process ,
Thanks! Glad you found it helpful!
Great help, thank you. Is it possible to keep one side fluffy?
so thorough !
thanks, glad you enjoyed it!
I wonder if the short flax linen fibers that are usually spun like wool could be felted.
Here goes I'm starting my first felting. Water, soap rub, etc.
Yay, good luck! I'd love to see it when it's done!
How'd it go?
Does this process work with beaver for capelines, say 250g worth of fur?
Very clear and thorough! Great work!
Hi! Loved your tutorial! Wich of the materials is the one that created the effect that looks like strands of hair? Is it the viscose fiber?
Yup exactly!
Thank you for this video helpful
Thanks, glad you liked it!
This is such a great video!
Thank you so much 👌👍
Great video!
Thanks!
I watched a video of a girl who spread the wool out REALLY thin, then used the warm soapy water to make the wool stick together!
I did not understand that wool's natural characteristic is that the hair has millions of scales on it that actually , once you slime the wool all around together , it cannot help but cling to each other, like a gang. You , calculate the thickness and then the magic begins by it's all bonded together, naturally.
You can make a quilt top out of it and stitch all over it , sewing the wool to the cotton batting.
The surface of the wool all blended together in different colors or monochromatic is SO warm , but it's so thin !!
Wool is weighted, warm yet can be thin enough to be a nice blanket or scarf summer or winter. Cozy!!
yeah wool super versatile, I love working with it! And yes, the reason wool felts is because the little of barbs all around the fiber. When you add heat, moisture, or soap, it opens those barbs, allowing them to interlock, causing felting.
My mother wet felted a lot, so much that she and a friend could sell things at local markets (she had another day job, though). She did all kinds of things; socks, boots, hats, bags, and whatnot. No technique was as time consuming as the ones shown here.
I'd love to hear about her techniques!
Hello can you use this wool for quilting?
Thank you!!!! Very helpful!
You're so welcome! Glad you enjoyed it!
So beautiful 🌹
Thank you!
Beautiful results and great instructions for wet felting.
Thanks so much!
New subscriber here!!!🎉i am also new to felting but I’m hooked. Wet felting is interesting. I never realized how much work goes into it. Great video! Thank you.
Thanks so much! Glad you enjoyed the video!
Thank you so much! This is really helpful.
Thanks glad you like it!
when you are rolling it... is it the movement? or the pressure that's important?
All of the above. It's all form of the agitation. You're both compressing the fibers and agitating them.
how long do you let the piece soak in vinegar? And are you supposed to rinse it out again after that? Thanks!
assuming i made a piece too small, do you think i could extend my piece after its been felted?
Thank you
super helpful!
Fun. So if you want it thicker, do a third later of the two directions or better to do another 4 layers?
You can add as many layers as you'd like! But definitely work in 2's so that you have a layer in each direction. Otherwise it will shrink more in the direction with fewer layers.
I found this tutorial really helpful. Thank you. I went to a craft day out, tutorial thing, where I left with a piece of unfelted felt. They said to look on you tube to finish it.
I really love the colours you've used. It turned out beautiful. Have you got any plans for it?
Aw that sounds fun, hope you're able to finish your piece! Glad you found this helpful!
No plans yet for mine, will likely cut it up into a project at some point.
@@ABCrafty Oh nooo!!. You can't cut it up. I'd be framing it.
Haha
holy shit you’re back?!? i loved your diys so much omg
haha yes!! I am officially back :D and thanks so much!!
7:29 wow! It surely looks like moss on the forest ground.
Right?? I love it :)
Instead of mesh fabric I used a plastic over it, I rolled it so many times but wool stick to a plastic, is it too much water or too little olive soap ? Or because it’s not mesh ? Thank you
Excellent tutorial! Thanks 😊
Thank you! Glad you liked it!
Thank you!!!
What would be the reason for my 1st ever wool felting project not shrinking? Is this an issue?
If the fibers are interlocking, then it's like not enough time/friction.
Would you use the same soap and vinegar on acrylic felting or would this technique not work for that? I can't handle wool typically since it makes me itchy but I have been able to use alpaca so far. I wasn't wanting to test this with alpaca though. This video makes wet felting look like so much fun, I got most of the supplies but no space for this YET :/
Generally acrylic will not felt as it doesn't have the same fiber properties.
Alpaca, however, is a type of wool so will felt. The softer the wool, though, the more difficult it is to felt. The reason it's soft is because the barbs along the fiber strands aren't as pronounced - these barbs are what interlock to felt the fiber together.
@@ABCrafty I did felt acrylic for eyes and mouth that I added to a crochet project that I brushed out the yarn since I posted this, it wasn't wet felted but it felted pretty well for what I attempted. At least as well as the cheapo starter bundle kit I got for supplies that had a few grams of wool to start with. Plus I didn't have red tips or itchy skin so perks :D Does merino wool work though for felting that seems to have the least reaction to me so far. I'm still working through figuring out which fibers I react to >.< I will say that fiber strands didn't want to hold as easily but I just twisted the acrylic yarn over it so it had a crisscross effect so it was easier to felt together. I did look up pointers for working with acrylic felt but this video actually made me want to felt instead of just to add to my crochet :P
Thank you for sharing ❤️
Thanks for watching! Hope it was helpful!
Could I use wool soap?
❤ köszönöm
Just watched this and the mini hat video. Do you show how to make actual size adult hats anywhere? We have sheep and I want to do this for a gift for my fiancé.
Thank you for a really good video. This may be an odd question but I am looking to make wet felted raw fleece to use as a weed suppressant in the garden. I am not really finding much about this but used loose raw wool and worked well except most blew away ( I am in an exposed coastal place). Do you think I could use these techniques to make a weed mat? I would like to use raw as the manky goodness will seep out to the ground as it breaks down. :)
I don't know anything about weed mats, but if you want to make a mat out of wool, this is exactly what you would want to do
I’m having trouble adding pure silk fibers to my Marino wool - they just won’t attach. Any suggestions?
You want to be very delicate when working with the silk - barely touching it. It can also help to put some wisps of wool over the silk to help it adhere.
How to wet felt a sheet to get a solid sheet of felt with holes like Swiss cheese.Rock On😷🤗
oo ya!
Hi, I have several pounds of felting wool for sale. Do you have any idea where to sell this at a reasonable fair price.
Hey loved the tutorial. Thank you. Im new to dry felting but I will go back to this video when starting wet felting. One question: 25 rolls for each side or 1 roll is "up and down"?
Thanks, glad you liked it! It's best explained at 3:54. When you wrap it up in the towel, you roll a total of 100 times. After 25 rolls, give the "log" a quarter turn. This way you roll it evenly. Then unwrap everything, flip the pool noodle to the opposite side and repeat. Then repeat 2 more times so the pool noodle starts at all four sides of the project. Then flip the project over and do it all over again.
So it's 100x from the left, 100x from the right, 100x from the top, 100x from the bottom. Then flip the project over and repeat.
So why not throw it in the washer for the fulling stage?
Doing it by hand, you control the direction of the shrinkage. A washing machine will absolutely help shrink it down, but it may not be the outcome you'd like. In some cases it may be fine, but if you want to control the dimensions, it makes sense to do it by hand.
This is brilliant ❤
why bubble wrap and not just a plastic piece?
It gives texture to rub and cause friction to mold the wool into fabric
Do I use the same method for a wet felted picture background?
yes! but you want to be extra gentle to start and likely for longer if there are lots of details you want to keep
Y ou need a template I found it makes it easier
How will throwing felt make it shrink??
It provides agitation - when the wool hits the table, it gets compressed on impact.
Do you think I can do the fulling by throwing my piece in the washing machine? Like I would do with an old sweater?
Yes, you absolutely can, but you have very little control over the way it shrinks and it could be too rough for the project depending on the details.
Are you laying it down in bubble rap?
Yes, I'm placing the wool on bubble wrap
Can I use carded wool for wet felting?
Absolutely! Wool in any format is fine - it doesn't have to be roving/slivers. You can also use wool batting as you would get from a carder
❤❤❤❤❤
Can I use normal tape water instead of hot water?
Yes, you absolutely can use room temperature water. It will simply take longer to felt and full your project.
The hot water helps because it expands the fibers, allowing them to more easily entangle with the other fibers. Room temperature water won't expand them as much so you have to provide more agitation, which should be done over a longer period of time versus more aggressively - otherwise you'll rough up the fibers.
is the mesh neccessary / why is it neccessary?
Technically it's not necessary - it helps keep the fibers in place when first starting the process
Can you tell us how to order the wool , what’s called and how much ?
I personally like to work with merino wool. The amount I used to make this fabric was very little - probably around 0.1 oz in total and then the added embellishments. I have links to some of my favorite wool and embellishments in the description. Let me know if you have any other questions! :D
i'd love to see how to do shoes and a hat with a brim
Nicely done and explained. I will recommend this, however, for beginners, I would remove all the fancy fibres and just have them create the fabric first. It's not so intimidating this way and encourages them to push further with extra goodies. Just my experience speaking.
It also looks like camouflage
I’m looking to make some pilgrim hats
ooo cute!