Tuesday, 13 April 2010

Felty Flowers Tutorial

The lovely Louise asked me to make a little tutorial to show how I made my felt flowers. This is my first attempt at a tutorial, so please be gentle with me….

I apologise for the layout of this blog, I have had many problems getting the pictures and wording in the right places, will try harder next time.

Felty Flowers



For these flowers I have cut a strip of felt the full length of the felt square and about 3-4 cm high.







Cut the felt in a gentle curving wave to give some shape to the finished flower.
At each end cut the felt to a curved point (so you don’t have a blunt squared end petal).




Now, using a strong cotton start with a running stitch close to the bottom of the felt (about 3-5 mm).

I have used a contrasting coloured cotton for illustration purposes only, I would suggest you use a cotton to match your flower, but it should not really matter as the sewing should not be visible on the flower once it’s finished.

For the pansy type flowers:

















Continue the running stitch to the end of the felt and gently gather the felt as you go, make this as loose or tight as you like, the more tight the gather, the smaller the finished flower will be.
















Tie your cotton off and you should now have a curly wiggly felt spring type thing (…well, you can’t accuse me of being too technical).


Now gather the felt into a flower shape, curling it over itself (like orange peel) until you get a flower shape you are happy with. Stitch it in place with a few stitches at the back. Don’t worry of there is a little hole in the middle of your flower we can fix this next.


















If you have a hole left, cut a small flower shape from your scrap felt in a contrasting colour and attach this to the middle of the flower with a couple of stitches. Hide your stitches in the middle by adding a small bead or button to the centre of your flower. If there is no hole just add a button or bead.

















For the rose flowers:
















Very similar to the above method except that you gather and sew as you go.


Start curling the felt round itself to make a rosebud shape, every couple of turns add a stitch to the bottom to keep it in place.



















Every few turns fold the felt back on itself for about 1 to1.5 cm and stitch this in place.

Continue curling to make your rose. Tie your cotton off underneath and you are done!








Leaves


If you want to add leaves, these are really simple to make.
















Cut green or brown felt into a double leaf shape, I just do this freehand and get all kinds of weird and wonderful leaf shapes.

With embroidery cotton backstitch your veins onto the leaf in a contrasting colour and tie off on the back.



















You can then fold the leaves to be next to each other or have one each side of your flower.

Simply tack these onto the back of your flower and you are done!

















Hope you were able to make sense of this, if not let me know and I will try to make it make sense (see what I mean).

Luv Kandi x

5 comments:

Unknown said...

Great tutorial Kandi! Must have a go at these.

Poppy x

Vicki said...

This is brilliant. I thought it a it cheeky to ask for a tutorial so I'm glad someone else did. I was going to try and muddle through these but now I know it's going to be much easier. Will let you know how I get on.
Vicki xxx

Tired Mom said...

Wonderful tutorial and gorgeous flowers. I shall definately be giving these a go as they are far cheaper then the ones in the SU mini catalogue.

Angie - Bumble Bee's Craft Den said...

Fantastic tutorial, will be having a go at these!!!

WWP said...

Thanks Kandi, can't wait to try. Sorry to be dim but that isn't just regular felt you're using is it??