I love working with wool blend felt - and I'm going to be doing more of it this year so I finally started carrying it in the shop. Lovely, luscious wool blend felt in 48 gorgeous colors! It feels so nice in the hands, it embroiders beautifully, and it's so nice for handsewing small softies. And wool felt wears so much better than the icky acrylic felt that you find in the big box craft stores. It's just lovely!
Not so lovely is the trick of transferring an embroidery pattern to it and cutting out fussy small pieces. There are a couple of tricks and products that make these things so easy - and that's what I'm sharing with you today.
Let's take embroidery first. You can't trace the pattern - the felt is too thick to see through. You don't want to simply draw on it - that lifts the fibers on the surface. I have two favorite methods. . .
1. For small bits of pattern on anything but the darkest colors you can use these embroidery transfer pens. Hold your pattern up to a window and trace over the back (or use the reversed image on the pattern). Then lay it ink-side down on your felt, hit it with an iron, and the lines will transfer to the felt. Nice! You can see this in action in this video.
2. I'm a total lazypants and I despise tracing, so for all but the simplest patterns I use The Magical Embroidery Stuff. Yes - it works beautifully on felt too! Just make sure to soak it off in COLD water. Hot (or even warm) water will pebble the surface of the felt and shrink it a bit. I don't use ice cold water, but I definitely stay a shade cooler than lukewarm. Just let it sit in the bowl for a good bit and it will dissolve away nicely - then rinse off the clingy bits under running water. DON'T wring it out. DON'T twist it. Just take it out of the water, set it on a towel and walk away. It will dry - I promise. The Magical Embroidery Stuff also works great on darker colors. You can see it in action in this video.
What about cutting small felt pieces for patterns? Pinning little pieces distorts the felt, making it hard to cut out small shapes nicely. You can't use pattern weights - they're too big for small pieces. I use freezer paper. Trace the pattern pieces to freezer paper, iron to the felt so they stick in place with no shifting, cut them out and peel off the paper. Magic! Except for the tracing bit. I've been known to print out my pattern pieces and then glue the pages to freezer paper so I don't have to trace. I hate it that much. The last time I was doing that I thought to myself, "Wouldn't it be nice if I could print the pattern directly onto freezer paper? I wonder if anyone makes printable freezer paper?" Well, guess what? THEY DO! I'm in love! And I bought some for my shop so you can fall in love too. :-) You can find it here.
What if you're embroidering and cutting out pattern pieces? For that I go back to The Magical Embroidery Stuff. Man - that stuff really is magical. :-)
I show you how to use both the printable freezer paper and The Magical Embroidery Stuff with felt in this video - including talking a bit about which product is better in different situations.
So - enjoy the felt! Enjoy the new I'll-never-trace-again product! And happy stitching!
Best,
Wendi
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