Currently browsing posts found in January2007
January 31st, 2007 at 14:35 pm »
Comments (0)So yesterday, I wrote about what felting is, and promised to go on to what you really are doing when using the “felting” needles to push fibers thru some other material.
Needle Punching, or as it is currently probably better know, Miniature Punch Needle Embroidery, for a long time. Not, perhaps as long as felting, but “pretty close”.
| Since you already know that Clover is one of my favorite Needle Crafts Tool makers, so here is the obligatory “tool picture” - As with all their products, The Clover Punch Embroidery tool works well for 95% of what I want to do and is reasonably priced.
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Needle punching is pushing something from one side of a ground cloth to another. On a larger scale, you may be familiar with the Rug making techniques such as Hooking (PULLING the fabric or yarn or other material from the front/right side facing you or PRODDING, which is PUSHING from back - right side away from you.
When you try to “Needle Felt” with fabric, yarns or threads that do not have the necessary follicles to twist, tangle, mesh and compact, you can’t felt. So you are PUNCHING.
Punching is a WONDERFUL way to embellish, you just need to understand that for a wearable or other object that will be “used” - you will need to use some of the many techniques which exist to “stabilize” the loops/threads/bits of everything from Angelina to Zoo sheddings of needle punching, such as iron-on fusibles or special glues even sometimes for punch needle embroidery, just packing the threads tightly. Without these measures, if you pull on the yarn, thread or even fibers, unless they are able to be felted, they will pull out and frankly “rather easily”.
Part III will be about the tools I use “most of the time”
HTH
Wheat
Be sure to let me know what
you think..

January 29th, 2007 at 09:07 am »
Comments (0)Playing yet another Name Game,
It would seem I am possessed this year with this whole “what’s in a name thing”
But I really prefer when correct names are used unless one is intending to be Entertaining (i.e., I call my blog entries, Blog-A-Mentaries and fellow Blog writers, Blog-A-Venturers, cause you never know what is going to happen.
So, while the introduction over the last few years of attachments and machines - has been great
EXCEPT the almost epidemic of misuse of the functions served by these tools, it is just making me somewhat crazy
Felting is the process by which the follicles found on WOOL (from many animal/protein fibers, but most easily Sheep) are somehow encouraged to wrap around each other.
For WET Felting, there are basically three things needed.
1. A Solution (soapy water works best, but you can do it with even Tap Water) so that the fibers can be encouraged to expand making the follicles “stand out” a bit.
2. Agitation, so they can be encouraged to wrap around each other.
3. Finally Temperature Change, so those expanded follicles not only go back to their original “closed”, but are “set” in their new twisted, meshed, compacted configuration.
DRY Felting, although much less messy and requiring a fair bit more work, essentially tries to do the same thing, but without water/solutions.
Dry Felting is accomplished by the pushing and PULLING of those follicles by the tiny barbs on “felting needles” - creating tangling so that the necessary twisting, meshing and as a result, compacting of the fiber into some form of fabric or 3D shape like my little friend Piccolo pictured here.
Now I know it has become “politically correct” to refer to thread as Fibers, but I do not. WHY because Fibers are really what makes up a yarn or thread or FELT fabric before it undergoes any sort of spinning process to create yarn and threads.
Bottom line …
without that twisting/tangling/meshing compacting you are not making Felt,
you are not Needle FELTING
So what are you doing? Felting, Punching or A Combination, better called
Embellishing & XPressing yourself
Check back in a day or two.
Be sure to let me know what
you think..

January 26th, 2007 at 06:05 am »
Comments (0)What’s in a name …
and would it really smell so sweet by any other name …
I don’t think so, although it is kinda cool to refer to ourselves as designers, more and more lately I have been questioning that self-designation.
If there is one particular black hole (did I ever mention my life long fascination with all things cosmic?)
in cyberspace where I can easily get lost for hours, it would be Style.com’s fashion show collections
I always emerge wondering, not only am I really qualified to claim the title, and what about all the submission that cross my desk?
So what is design? Design, according to Wikipedia,
is usually considered in the context of the applied arts, engineering, architecture, and other such creative endeavours, is used as both a noun and a verb. As a verb, “to design” refers to the process of originating and developing a plan for a product, structure, or component.
and then goes on to say:
As a noun, “a design” is used for both the final (solution) plan (e.g. proposal, drawing, model, description) or the result of implementing that plan (e.g. object produced, result of the process). …
Wikipedia defines Designer as
a broad term for a person who designs any of a variety of things. That usually implies the task of creating or of being creative in a particular area of expertise. It is frequently used to reference someone who draws or in some ways uses visual cues to organize their work. Designers are usually responsible for making a model that takes into consideration each step in a product’s development, including not only how a product will be used but also how it will be made.
Which leads to the final paragraph under Designer:
Designing normally requires a designer considering aesthetic, functional, and many other aspects of an object or process, which usually requires considerable research, thought, modeling, interactive adjustment, and re-design.
Which now has me asking, almost daily and sometimes hourly, not only of every piece I do “for me” but of any that “will be published”
It that pattern or project the work of a Designer or an Alteration Specialist?
Or something else?
Just something to think about - I certainly will be - and who knows, maybe writing more about it.
Wheat
P.S. Am I the only one who thinks the folks at Alexander McQueen may have over reacted just a bit to either Phantom of the Opera, or the current controversy over the responsiblity of the Fashion Designers to discourage eating disorders. I mean several of those dresses are perfect examples of why I don’t wear dancercise clothes out side my own home or backyard (and not very often in the back yard either)
Be sure to let me know what
you think..

January 25th, 2007 at 13:09 pm »
Comments (0)Sorry for an inconvenience, but our theme seems to dislike Internet Exploder users and they are complaining they can’t comment. So I will be “working on fixing this” over the next few days
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If you have a moment to leave a comment and let me know what browser and version you used that would be very helpful.
Thanks
Wheat
Be sure to let me know what
you think..

January 25th, 2007 at 10:26 am »
Comments (1)It is always fun to be the one who gets to tell someone they won a prize and so I am having a good week -
contacting the Retailers who visited the
TNNA Designers and Teachers PreView Promenade activitiy at TNNA’s Winter Show Last week.
It is even nicer when you get to tell someone whose shop you have had a chance to visit, (remember I lived in the NY Metro area from birth to … well for a long time) YOU WON !!!!
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That is why I am so enjoying sharing with you about to
Eileen Aird of Ridgewood Needlepoint
Her shop is located downtown at
6 South Maple Ave., Ridgewood, NJ 07450
over in Bergen County - just outside on New York City.
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You can find out more about her shop by visiting the store (tell’em you read about it here)
After getting a close look at the models for Janet Perry’s Stitch Guides - I may have to give Eileen a call about The Christmas Sweets. After all, Mother’s Day is coming, my Mom loves Christmas, and she should not be eating candy, so this just might make a GREAT Mom’s day gift.
So much at the show has me itching to get stitching - girl hardly knows where to start.
Wheat
Be sure to let me know what
you think..
