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Posts tagged ‘flowers’

How to make a felt rose

I had so much feedback about the red felt rose, I’ve put together a tutorial on how to make it. Happy to assist anyone who comes into the shop with this one!

You need:

1 piece each of Nepalese wool felt, rose colour and a green.

Matching threads and a needle

A brooch back or an alligator clip, depending on whether you want to pin it to your hat or lapel, or wear it in your hair.

Cut out the three rose pieces and the leaf pattern from the felt. (Email me for a pdf of the pattern – I cannot find a way to link it as yet, or grab one from in store!)

(the bud shape changed a little during the process and so the pattern is different from the photo)

Curl the rounded side of the bud around the flatter side, like in the photo. Put a couple of stitches through the bottom with a doubled thread (I tie off the thread end and after the first stitch, pass through the knotted end so it doesn’t pull through). Wind the thread around the base a couple of times, knot off and cut.

Now you need to start stretching the two big petal pieces, starting with the smaller one, along the “convex” side. Stretch firmly between your fingers a small section…

…at a time. Stretch, move along, stretch again…

…keep going…you’ll definitely notice that the edge will start to petal outwards under your fingers…

The sculpted piece. It is curving so much now it looks like a circle! This gives the rose that natural shape.

Now, with a nice long doubled thread, knotted and looped through at the beginning, put a running stitch through the unstretched edge. Stitches should be around a quarter inch, but don’t have to be perfect or even at all. Pull up the stitching as shown in the photo above, to about one third of the original size. Actually with such thick felt, it’s hard to pull it up much more anyway, so let the felt guide you.

This is how it looks gathered up. Now we’re going to use the same thread to start sewing it to the bud and form the rose.

OK, now I am trying a video for the first time. Eep! I think the process of curling the petal piece around the bud and sewing it down as you go is best seen in motion.

‘Scuse all the noise in the background, it’s not related to the video. It’s the other ladies in my stitching group chatting. :)

Once that petal is all sewn on, knot it off. Rethread, and do the same thing with the larger petal. Start it on the opposite side of the rose to the end point of the smaller one.

Now the leaves. Cut them out,and stretch the sides a little. I also did a running stitch up the centre and then back down on each leaf, and pull it up just a little, to give the leaves a bit of a curl as shown above.

Put the leaves on the bottom side of the rose (which I just realised I didn’t photograph!! ARGH! It is flattish if you’ve done it right!) and stitch into place with a few stitches.

Tie the thread off and snip, and here you are! A twin for my first rose. All you now need to do is to sew a brooch pin or alligator pin onto the back.

The great thing about these roses is that if you don’t like how it is sitting, you can quickly pull the stitching out and redo it.

TADA! One perfect rose, always in bloom. Scale it up or down, make it sit flatter – the process is the same, it’s just how you put it together. Happy sewing!

 

 

Craft Classes

Until Christmas, it’s all about gift ideas and decorations! Heaps of opportunities to combine learning new techniques with producing beautiful, useable things.

Check out our Class Calendar for the exciting classes we have scheduled for you.

Christmas Stockings – just one of our fun and useful Christmas workshops!

A rose by any other name…

Those readers who frequent the shop will know we’ve all gone a bit felting mad! It all started because I found a source of the most exquisite, 100% Nepalese wool felt. Coloured sliever, felting needles and foams and the whole regalia soon followed.

Anyway, last night at our weekly Wednesday craft group (everyone welcome) I decided to have a play, and made a red rose for my hair out of the wool felt.

It is cut and shaped by hand, and came together quite quickly. No felting required in the end, but the soft, thick felt moulds beautifully into shape.

I love it! :) And I still have enough red felt left over to make another one, and this time take some photos of the process, and even make a pattern!

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