Does anyone who has made felt know if wool fleece (the sort that is processed and made into 2 inch thick rolls for loft insulations) can be made into felt by soaking soaping beating and rolling etc??
Many products bear the words Organic, Sustainable, Ecologically whatever.
Ever seen Organic Wildcaught Sardines in Tomato sauce?
In a very ’sustainable’ looking brown paper cardboard box ( metal tin inside) ?
Load of BS. Marketing.
We once managed to pick up half a dozen eggs from "Free range, vegetarian chickens"
thanks for the tips and replies from every body... I was imagining that the insulation I had in mind was just pure wool, I never knew it was glued up or treated. perhaps not such a great idea after all. I'm guessing thick wool felt carpet underlay is much the same way?I make felt, and to be honest I wouldn't use this stuff. Well, maybe for a sit mat, but remember that it's been processed and treated to be insulation.
The manufacturers/installers claim that it's 'pure wool', and 'ecologically friendly', but even the stuff made in Europe which isn't usually mixed with plastic fibres is treated with Borax.
Borax is good stuff, just not in our lungs or on our skin. It does protect the wool from moths and fungus though.....but neither insecticides or fungicides are good things in our lungs or on our skins.
There's one other caveat. For wool to felt it really needs those little scales left on the fibres. Pure New Wool, the stuff you can wash without shrinking is made by removing those little scales. I don't know if they've removed the scales from the insulation so that it doesn't mat down. Pack wool into something and it'll felt anyway, roll it up and it's pretty much guaranteed to felt a bit. It does that, it's natural.
It only doesn't do it on a sheep because the sheep produces something in it's sweat/oil called suint.
Suint naturally cleans the hair and wool when it gets wet, and the lanolin helps keep it all in good order.
We have to remove that from the fleece before we felt it (it and shed skin scales attract insect mites, etc.,) otherwise we're just trapping dirt in the layers of the fleece felt, and to remove the stink. No getting away from it, an unwashed fleece smells and it's not a good smell.
I don't know how they've washed the wool before they've made these insulation batts.
Our farmers are very careful now with organophosphates (why we have had an enormous rise in the issues with ticks) but that's not true of the whole of 'Europe', and I don't know where they have sourced the fleece.
Organophosphates are most definitely not stuff you want on your hands or in your air. From handling a fleece from a sheep that was dipped a bit before shearing my hands broke out in the most horrendous dermatitis that left my skin cracked and bleeding, and just touching one of those fleece now has my skin so swollen that I have had to have a ring cut off. It's not fun stuff to be around.
On the other hand, having written all that, I'm interested to know whether the stuff can be safely felted
See when you have a go ? come back and let us know how you got on.
It's easy enough to felt something. Get hold of either some bubble wrap or the kind of bamboo matts that used to be used as table mats or for rolling sushi. Even a bit of old net curtain will do.
Find a squirty bottle of some kind, shave some soap off a bar (we go all posh and purist and only use the finest olive oil castille, or glycerine soap but honestly, any bar of soap that's used beside the sink or in the bath will do) and put some hot water in the bottle. Shake it well until it dissolves. You should have a greyish looking liquid. Squirt that or shake that all over the fleece. Roll it up in the bubble wrap/bamboo mat and roll and roll and roll it backwards and forwards, pressing firmly the whole time.
Open it up and turn the fleece 90˚ and do the same again.
It might need more soapy water, but if it's going to felt, that ought to do it.
Measure the piece you're going to try first, and mark it in some way (I stitch through a length of coloured yarn at one side and corner) so that you can see if it felts more in one direction or the other, and measure when you're done. Good felting will really shrink the batt. Poor felting will hardly move it.
Best of luck with it
M
is that anything like the industrial method?Toddys idea is good, I've made some boot insoles out of several bits of an old moth eaten wool blanket.
I cut three insole shapes for each foot then got a multi needle felting tool for a few pounds from my local sewing and knitting craft shop. Needle felted them together using an old sponge to rest the work on. Works well. Made some thrifty cosy insoles. You could also put some fleece between the layers to make them realy comfy.