Reminder: Basic and Beyond – Felted Cowl Class – a few Spots Left

Feltmakers Ireland’s annual Basic and Beyond Workshop has returned. We will meet on SUNDAY, the 14th of April.

Guild member Juliane Gorman will show us how to make a beautiful and delicate Nunofelted cowl using the finest silk fabric and Merino fibres.

Time: 10 AM – 3 PM.

Cost: 65 euros for members / 80 euros for non-members.

All materials will be provided, along with tea/coffee and refreshments.
Please bring a packed lunch and a large towel.

Where: Our usual meeting place, the CIE Sports Hall, Library Square, Inchicore, D08 PA07.

If you would like to reserve a place, please email – allmembers.feltmakersireland@gmail.com

No payment will be necessary until our Secretary, Fiona, confirms your place. Then you’ll be asked for bank transfer or cheque.

If you have any questions, please let us know.

Disclaimer for Feltmakers Ireland Blog

Feltmakers Ireland aims to share information about awards, education, events, exhibitions, and opportunities that you will find interesting. Our sharing is neither paid for by nor an endorsement of these individuals or organisations.

Contact Us: If you have any concerns about content, please email us at feltmakersie@gmail.com.

Questions: For questions about content, please follow the link to the organisation involved in hosting the event.

Felting Journeys: Clare Brophy on Nuno Felting

Felting Journeys is a series of articles on how members have fallen in love with feltmaking. Our inaugural post is by Clare Brophy.

Silk and wool Nunofelted wrap by Clare Brophy

What is Nuno felting?

NUNO is a method of wet feltmaking. The name is derived from the Japanese word for ‘cloth’. It involves the bonding or blending of sheep’s wool into a sheer or woven fabric like silk gauze or silk chiffon. The resulting material is lightweight, strong, warm, and luxurious. 

It was invented by Polly Stirling, an Australian textile artist, 25 years ago when she sought to create wearable felt for warmer climates. {There is a fascinating video interview with Polly here – https://youtu.be/xYnBcCqtUzg?si=wYDtobdIA4fScjyC }

You can Nunofelt using other fabrics, too. Any open or loose weave, where the fibre can migrate through and intertwine, can become felt. Other fabrics give a different result to silk, plus the finest Merino wool. Nuno made using silk and Merino drapes beautifully and feels luxurious on the skin. I’ve used muslin, cheesecloth and several different kinds of cotton, but my first love is silk chiffon or the finest Margilan silk and Merino.

Some Examples of Nuno felting

How do you make NUNO?

To create Nunofelt, you make a sandwich by placing silk inside the Merino wool by laying down the wool first, then the silk, and then the wool on top. The rest of the process is the same as any wet felting process. You can also make an ‘open sandwich’ by adding wool to only one side. Some designers make the sandwich with Merino wool inside two layers of silk. I’ve never tried this myself, or not yet!

What about silk?

I discovered Nunofelting about eight or nine years ago. I was immediately hooked! I scoured charity shops searching for vintage silk. I became known among the nine charity shops on Camden Street and the one on Prussia Street as “The Silk Searcher”. My neighbour, Feltmakers Ireland’s Chairperson, Deirdre Carroll, kindly donated some of her silk scarves to upcycle into Nunofelted wearables. If I found a dress or a blouse, I’d cut it up into small sample sizes, dye them into many colours, and use the only wool roving I knew about then, from DHG in Italy – Merino roving.

Of course, I made mistakes: 

1. Buying silk online, only to discover it wasn’t silk but some mixed synthetic mixture masquerading as silk which didn’t felt. I vowed never again to buy online but to hold the silk in my hand and have it tested. Be clear on which silk you need for the final purpose. I’ve used silk Organza and silk Habotai. Both felt well for fine wearables.

2. I tried using cheaper, rougher wool batts, as I bought wherever I could, often in kits, online. I was never entirely happy with the results; it depends on your purpose. Batts are okay with muslin for bags or slippers – just not worn next to the skin.

I am sure I became a nuisance at the silk counters in the TWI Fabric Shop in Dublin and on my other regular shopping sprees in the Julian Lopez Fabric Shops in Madrid and Murcia because I insisted on the Burn Test when I was buying silk Chiffon or Habotai. They always brought me to a safe sink with water, got a cigarette lighter and proved that the silk I was buying was indeed truly silk! (If it’s not silk, it has a flame; if it IS silk, it will leave a charred hole and no flame). Another less reliable test is the ‘blow test’: if you can feel cold air on your palm when you blow through the silk, then it is silk.

I should say, too, that very early on, I discovered Margilan silk Gauze and was brave enough to buy a 100-metre bolt directly from Afghanistan! I enjoyed dying it and matching it to the Merino wool. I was constantly learning about textures and finishes.

Margilan Gauze is a very light, soft silk fabric with a beautiful sheen, allowing for transparency and breathability. Meld it with the finest Merino, or a silk and Merino mix, from DHG in Italy; the results are fantastic! I like adding Tussah silk or viscose to add interest and texture.

I should add another reassuring fact: I have washed all these silks and wools in relatively warm water and ironed them on a silk setting. I have used, in recent years, a sander to speed up the felting. Silk, fused with Merino, is a robust fabric that fares well in this process.

More Samples

My involvement:

Before I discovered feltmaking, I had been a painter/artist, having gone to the National College of Art & Design (NCAD) for a few years before and after I first retired in 2004. But after discovering Nunofelting, I did nothing for an entire year except study wet felting on YouTube, joining all sorts of online communities for wet felting, especially those of the Nuno style. I created endless samples. I am indebted to the many makers who upload tutorial videos and share them with learners like me through YouTube. I am also indebted to those who answered my questions.

Lena Archbold’s online courses became my ‘go-to’ place. After you buy her courses, she follows up by emailing her students many helpful tips. Additionally, there are countless courses available online for all standards of feltmaking. For example, Guild member Hélène Dooley (Feltzen) teaches online via the International Feltmakers Association.

When I made my first wrap, the only 100% silk chiffon I could find in this city of Dublin was in TWI, Mountjoy Sq. East. Dublin 1. And they only had a black colour, so I made a black Nunofelted wrap, with black Merino roving and tussah silk fibre. Later, a city dress designer, whom I employed to make a dress for me for a special wedding, saw it and asked me if I would trade it with her in return for her dressmaking skills! She adored it, and I was delighted with my dress!

Then, I made a second wrap, this time for myself, using the same back silk chiffon and a cool green wool fibre. I was wearing it around my shoulders while stopping for a coffee en route to a family wedding in south Wicklow one day. We popped into Avoca. Imagine my shock and surprise when a very glamorous lady stopped me. Hugely admiring my wrap, she asked where I bought it. I thanked her but avoided answering about buying it. She persisted, and finally, I whispered, ‘I made it myself!’ Well!! She then told me she was the buyer for Avoca and would buy them from me!!! Could I make, perhaps, 10 a month? For all their stores???

So, my business was born! After eight years and a particularly busy three years during COVID-19, I finally closed this year – retiring for the second time in my life. I have sold Nunofelted wraps, neck warmers and collars online all over the world during these years. I also sold them in a designer shop in the Powerscourt Townhouse Centre in Dublin. 

Other Maker’s Examples

You will have seen exquisite examples of Nuno felting at Feltmakers Ireland’s recent ‘Bountiful’ exhibition, where designer Mel Bradley created two felted scarves using the technique.

One of Mel Bradley’s Nunofelted shawls.

Feltmakers Ireland

Several years ago, I was out in Phoenix Park one Sunday morning and happened to walk by the Studio near Knockmaroon Gate, which is now the Biodiversity Centre. Curious to see what was happening, I stopped and was invited in by Vicki. I soon joined Feltmakers Ireland and widened my knowledge of feltmaking: making hats, slippers, and neck warmers. And I learned about adding all sorts of embellishing fibres and yarns. I did all their workshops and Sunday Sessions. I am indebted to this wonderful group of people who warmly share their skills and knowledge with all new members, as I was then. 

I have always been a lifelong learner, and although arthritis in my hands, and my advancing age, (78 next birthday), are stopping me now from feltmaking, I will always support Feltmakers Ireland in whatever way I can! 

So, hang it there, new members! The sky is the limit with Feltmakers Ireland! I have experienced Showcase, Bloom, and Art exhibitions. Plus, I have also had the experience of working on the committee!

Nowadays, I see that Textile Art is, at last, getting more attention and publicity than before. Our next focus will be to persuade the Art world that Felt Art can rightfully take its place alongside all other art forms. Onwards and Upwards!

Me, wearing my own black and green wrap about eight years ago!

 Signed: Clare Brophy 

November 2023

Find her on Facebook, HERE or Instagram, HERE.

Workshops with Nessa McCormack

Felt Making Classes – Textile Art

Ancient techniques and contemporary designs in Felt making

Nessa2Weekly classes will begin on Tuesday 9th September in Kilpedder, co. Wicklow, (near Greystones) 10.30 til 1 pm. ( other class times available on request).

We will experiment with a range of felt making techniques including Nuno, Shibori, and working with templates to make beautiful vessels, bags or any 3D shape that can be applied to felt to create striking three-dimensional effects in your felted fabric. The main focus is on experimentation and discovery.

Inspired by beauty in simple form, Nessa’s style brings together her love and fascination of the natural world and felt making in sculptural form.

Nessa has been exploring and teaching shibori and nuno felting techniques in her more recent works and is particularly interested in the contemporary approach of binding metal pieces with delicate fibres such as silk and lace with wool.

These classes are suitable for beginner to advanced felt-makers of all levels

classes cost €25 and include coffee, tea and cake.

Contact Nessa McCormack at nessamccormack@gmail.com, 086 6022511, makefelt.com.Nessa

Shibori in Kerry

Felt making workshop in Dingle, Co. Kerry

Shibori Workshop – Ancient techniques, Contemporary designs in Felt making

We will experiment with a range of ‘shibori’ techniques that can be applied to felt to create striking three-dimensional effects in your felted fabric. The main focus is on experimentation and discovery.

Inspired by beauty in simple form, Nessa’s style brings together her love and fascination of the natural world and felt making in sculptural form.

Nessa has been exploring and teaching shibori and nuno felting techniques in her more recent works and is particularly interested in the contemporary approach of binding metal pieces with delicate fibres such as silk and lace with wool.

This workshop is suitable for beginner to advanced felt-makers of all levels

One day workshop on Friday August 22nd , 10:30 am to 4:30 pm, in Dingle, Co. Kerry, cost €75

Contact Nessa McCormack at nessamccormack@gmail.com, 086 6022511, makefelt.com.

To reserve a spot and get supply list.

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Workshop with Catherine O’Leary

Catherine O'Leary

Feltmakers Ireland are delighted to welcome Catherine O’Leary from Australia to give a three-day workshop in October. Check out her website at http://www.catherineoleary.com.au “This felt making workshop explores the different possibilities of felted garment designs. Creating intricate and original surface designs using nuno prefelts, each student will develop a pattern that suits her body shape. The main focus of this workshop will be on surface decoration and the manipulation of garment design”.

Click here for the application form for the workshop, which gives details of dates and costs Catherine O’Leary Application