|
|




My own approach to feltmaking draws on the pastoral origins of felt - rooted in nomadic cultures, inter-dependent with animals.
I like the things I make to look & feel ‘animal’, to retain a connection with their source yet have a life of their own.

I try to allow the actual process of making felt to have a direct bearing on the end result - responding to the physical material as well as more abstract thoughts & ideas.
I’ve been making felt for over 25 years and have worked on huge things such as boats & yurts, see my work, but lately I’ve changed scale and seen the possibilities of smallness.

I work on ideas that can take shape outside in the woods & fields, promoting awareness of environmental issues and sharing a love of the natural world.

Felt is made from sheep’s wool. However not every breed produces suitable felting wool. If you are thinking of buying a fleece pull off a tuft of wool & start to roll it in the palm of your hand, spit on it & roll round & round. If it starts to contract into a tight mass you can be sure it felts. Some will just stay rough, open & fluffy. Avoid the fleece of Suffolk black-faced sheep!
Best UK breeds are Blue-faced Leicester & Cotswold. Many others mainly kept by smallholders, such as Gotland, black Welsh Mountain, Balwen, & Shetland are also suitable.
Felt has traditionally been used for many of the essentials of daily life: for living in yurts, & clothing hats, coats, slippers, also for bags, rugs & horse covers. To see examples of traditional felt visit the Horniman, or British Museum.
