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

Thursday, July 3, 2014

Accessories Special: Inmano Felted Scarves


Text and photos: Magdalena Spiewak.

I have always been tinkering with things for as long as I can remember. 

As a kid, I used to play with modeling clay and papier-mâché. My dolls and teddy bears would always wear little caps and socks that I knit or crocheted for them. 

When I grew a little older, I would remodel my ordinary skirts and sneakers into less ordinary ones. Even my poor furniture could not be left alone! I would always repaint it, rework it, repolish it, or simply convert it into something else. It was my mom who encouraged me to be creative and use my imagination, and it was my dad who taught me to love the various materials I work with (he can still make marvelous things out of wood).

I am a gardener by profession. And it seems that flowers have always been important. It is probably the reason why I like Art Nouveau so much. The colors and shapes, and the texture and structure can be very inspiring.

I love to travel, and Tuscany, Italy, is my favorite place on earth. No wonder I am a keen cook
and Italian cuisine is what I cook best. My recipes for pesto and tiramisu are just awesome! 

I hope that I will be able to brush up on my Italian, which is a little rusty.

Now, how do I work? Well, ideas take me by surprise. Continually. I collect them, sometimes take them down on slips of paper, and then work on them chiseling each one patiently. I work with great care and diligence. 

The items I make are best quality. I use pure silk and merino wool, the best materials available. 

I want every item to be original, beautiful, and, last but not least, functional. I have lots of fun, believe me!
I just play it by ear because this is exactly when my best ideas are being born, like my smart outfit for a carnival ball matching the color of my lime-turquoise frames, or the tree painted on a cracked wall in my dining room, or the teddy-bear cake made for my daughter’s birthday. 

I really do not know how it feels to be bored or to hang around doing nothing. 

I am resting while I am working. In total silence.

Magdalena Spiewak - Inmano Shop


Monday, June 9, 2014

Accessories Special: Rudman Felted Art


"About 7 years ago I saw on the Internet a picture of cute shaggy little mouse.
I couldn’t understand how it was made! It wasn’t made with any technique known to me.
It wasn’t sewn, knitted or glued.
I was very curious and I started looking for similar creations and discovered a whole new world of felting."

Irena Rudman has been making felted accessories for years now. Her pieces caught my attention, because they are like wearable paintings. The beautiful colors, the elegant shapes and details in all her accessories give them an almost surreal look, like out of a fantasy story.

Irena now lives in New York and she has been doing crafts and handiwork since her childhood: sewing, knitting, weaving, embroidery, beading and working with wire, macramé, and much more.

“At first I started to make felted toys, with time I began to make all kind of things with wool: flowers, brooches, scarves, bags, heats, shoes, belts and more.
Nowadays I am making only felted scarves. The reason for this is beacuse I love this accessory the most.

Creating scarves allows my imagination to go wild, allows me to be more creative than I would be with any other products.

I have created more than 1000 scarves and each one of them is unique, one of a kind item.

My great inspiration in work is nature.
Most of my ideas come to me while watching animals and plants.
Sometimes I would want to capture the colors of landscape, sometimes it would be the shape of natural objects.

I love working with colors and shades, and I pay significant attention to the texture as well.

The magnificent beauty of nature and the variety of colorful flowers, trees and her creatures are my constant and never-ending source of inspiration.

The power and the smell of sea, the rustling of the forest, birds singing , beauty of sunrises and sunsets - All this lays an indelible imprint on my work and reflected in the color palette.

Felting is a very time consuming process.
In average it takes me about 4 hours to create each scarf.

And that is without counting the dyeing and drying time.

And I have more complicated and time consuming scarves with 6 hours of continuous work, for example this blue butterfly scarf."

Recently Irena has been fascinated with the shibori technique - the Japanese art of dyeing.

Shibori is a Japanese term for several methods of dyeing cloth with a pattern by binding, stitching, folding, twisting, compressing it, or capping. Some of these methods are known in the West as tie-dye.

There is an infinite number of ways one can bind, stitch, fold, twist, or compress cloth for shibori, and each way results in very different patterns. 

Each method is used to achieve a certain result, but each method is also used to work in harmony with the type of cloth used. 
Therefore, the technique used in shibori depends not only on the desired pattern, but the characteristics of the cloth being dyed.
 Also, different techniques can be used in conjunction with one another to achieve even more elaborate results.

In Japan, the earliest known example of cloth dyed with a shibori technique dates from the 8th century; it is among the goods donated by the Emperor Shōmu to the Tōdai-ji in Nara.

Irena revives dying technologies while inventing new ones. She loves inventing designs and special felting techniques.
I’m using a lot of techniques, approaches, professional tweaks and secrets.

She is happy to share her knowledge and skills with students and gives them the opportunity to sell their work in a special section of her online store. You can also check our her website.

















Sandra Kemppainen, Irena Rudman; 
Photos: Irena Rudman.