Showing posts with label making felt animals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label making felt animals. Show all posts

Thursday, 22 January 2015

Mrs Plop's Needle Felting Kit - Make your own 'Maisie' Mouse

Suitable for beginnners to needle felting.

Available to buy in my Etsy shop here: Maisie Mouse Needle Felting Kit By Mrs Plop's Shoppe


Make a needle felted mouse with Mrs Plop's needle felting 'Maisie' Mouse kit.
Maisie is a little mouse who lives at Mouselings HQ here at Mrs Plop's Shoppe. She loves to give flowers, and is holding a little posy of pink flowers.

Suitable for beginners. Many people who purchased my mouse needle felting kits had no previous experience, and reported back to me that they found it easy.

Tutorial support by myself is also included in this kit.

This kit provides (almost) everything you need to make a needle felted mouse. The only thing that isn't included is a felting pad, so you will need to get yourself a felting pad before you begin.

The kit contains

Step by step full colour instructions

White core wool
Champagne outer fur wool
Pink wool for limbs, hands and feet.
(The wool contained in the kit is high quality, British ethically produced wool. It is the wool that Mrs Plop herself uses)

Two felting needles - One straight and one spiral.

Cotton thread in pink and black, plus a sewing needle.

Posy of pink paper flowers.

Also included when you buy this needle felting kit - One month of free needle felting support, (but no more than 8 emails in total. Mrs Plop is over 200 years old, and when she's not felting, she does need her sleep ;0) ) in which you can contact Mrs Plop personally via email with any questions you may have about the kit, or your needle felting progress in general. The month's support begins from the date that your kit arrives, so you need to let me know when you have received it. Further details of the support service will be sent to you when you've made your purchase.

Please take great care with the needles in this kit as they are very sharp!

Monday, 4 August 2014

How to make needle felted legs & feet for a sleeping mouse intermediate level

Needle Felted Sleeping Mouse in a Vintage Sugar Bowl by Mrs Plop
Making the legs for my needle felted mice (or any other animal) used to drive me nuts. It took me quite a while to figure out what was the best way to do it for me, and it is one of the most difficult aspects of making a needle felted animal (in my opinion)

Some needle felt artists make legs by using a method where they wrap wool around wire, and that is one way of doing it, which I have done on occasion, but it doesn't give you as much sculptural detail as the method I've shown here.

Learning how to needle felt legs for an animal is quite tricky and it does take lots of practice, but I hope this tutorial will help you, if you choose this method.

Please note, this is a tutorial for those at intermediate level.

If you're looking for a needle felting kit, I currently offer two kits, one for beginners and one for advanced beginner or intermediate level (although a complete beginner bought this kit and wrote to me to tell me she found it easy to use and was very happy with the mouse she made)

My needle felting kits fox or mouse, can be found in my Etsy shop:
Orange & white fox, needle felting kit for beginners - make your own 'Frankie' Fox 
 
 Mouse with flower posy - make your own 'Maisie' Mouse

Both kits include free tutorial support from myself. Not just relating to these kits, but to any aspect of your needle felting journey :)


Frankie Fox Needle Felting Kit
Maisie Mouse Needle Felting Kit

Now onto the tutorial!

Love Mrs Plop xx

Step 1 - making a leg
Wrap a piece of wool around a cocktail stick. You can use a skewer or something similar, but I use cocktail sticks because they are the right width for me. (Although sometimes they can break, so be careful!) When you're wrapping your wool around the stick, try to keep the wool as even as possible, and wrap it around tightly, and then rub it between your hands vigorously. The friction will cause the wool to part felt. In the photo below, you can see that the wool is thicker at one end, but that doesn't matter because you won't need all of it, and I use the thicker part to make the main base of the leg.


Step 2
You can just slide the wool off the cocktail stick, and it will hold its part-felted shape. You can then take your felting needle and felt it as normal, until you are happy with the shape. I do felt legs in a gung-ho manner :) because you want them to be as firm as possible. So prepare to do a lot of needle felting on the legs. This particular leg is going to be a back leg, so I have made it quite long. But even if you wanted a front leg and your tube shaped felted piece is too long, it doesn't matter, because you can shorten it later. You should end up with something like this...


Step 3 - making a foot
Next you can add your feet. Take another piece of wool and fold it in half so that it's doubled over. You'll need to practice with the amount of wool you need. You may find that at first you use too much or too little, but that's something that will come right with time and practice.
When your wool is folded over, shape it with your felting needle into a sort of oblong shape but with edges that fan out slightly at the top. If you are at intermediate level, you'll know that when you felt wool to attach a felted piece to another felted piece, you'll need to leave some of the wool at the end un-felted, as that is the only way the two pieces will felt together. But you may be reading this post as a beginner. It's better to have more unfelted wool to attach to another piece than not enough! You can always pull some of the wool off if there is too much.

(See photo below. But please note, always felt on a foam mat! I've just used the background below for the purposes of the photo)


Then choose three points along your edge, at about the same distance from eachother and felt your oblong shape by poking and shaping the wool in one place on the oblong shape to make toes. Then do the same on the other two points that you've chosen. It will look like three little triangular shapes, as below...



Step 4
Felt and shape the foot onto the leg, as below. Hold the unfelted wool tightly onto the leg, making sure the foot piece and the leg piece are as close as possible, otherwise you'll get a section of the leg that has a bend in it. If that does happens though, you can always strengthen that section by felting in more wool.

Now to add the furry part of the leg. Take some of the wool that you want to make up the fur of your mouse, and double it over in the same way that you did with the foot. Felt it into the leg, all the way around at whatever point you choose, depending on how much of the pink part of the leg you want showing. I usually use quite a thick wad of wool for this part, because you obviously want the leg to get thicker as you felt upwards to form a thigh shape.



Step 5
Now you have your outer fur felted onto your inner pink leg. Felt it enough so that it holds but make sure you can move the wool so that you can cut off some the inner pink tube leg to the length you want, so that it looks the right length on your mouse.

Then, holding it firmly against the body of your mouse, just felt it in, you can just pull off any excess wool that you don't want.


Eeeek that looks a bit brutal doesn't it?!
When you've felted the wool in, you can then add more wool over the top and shape it to make more of a thigh shape...

You can use the same method to add the tail, and bottom :) Adding those also gives a lot more definition to the legs, but I will go into that in another tutorial.