An afternoon of Nuno felting

2018 Felt making class with Alanna Nelson

An Afternoon of Nuno Felting

March 9, 2019

1 to 4 pm in Melrose, MA

$65 includes materials

Play with wool, soap and water to create fabric that is sturdy, beautiful and useful. We’ll talk about several ways to create felt and see examples. Learn how your wool choice impact the final fabric.

Create your own wool fabric about the size of a placemat using wool, water and soap.

No tools necessary. The class fee includes wool and simple tools to create your own felt. Wear comfortable shoes, bring a full apron (waterproof is great)  and clothes that don’t mind getting damp.

Class size limited to four people.
Have questions? Contact Alanna

Reserve your place by sending a check to Tactile Travel Fabric & Fiber, P.O. Box 761092 Melrose, MA 02176 or use the PayPal button below. Be sure to include your email address and/or phone number. Your payment is refundable up to three days before the class, provided that your spot is filled by someone off the waiting list.


Your Name



Melrose Snowflake Block Pattern

Melrose Snowflake Block Pattern

You’ve heard about the Melrose History Quilt project

What? Didn’t I talk about this on the blog yet? I guess that was a few months ago. So, let’s catch up!

In May, the Melrose Historic Commission were very supportive of the project! Catch me at their booth at the Victorian Fair on September 9. In June, at the Melrose World Wide Knit in Public Day, knitters gave me good ideas for the Yarnstorm. Such great energy! Many signed up for the newsletter and will decorate Melrose with yarn creations while the quilt is in town. For more info, head over to the Melrose History Quilt Yarnstorm to learn about how you can be part of the action.

Inspired by the Snowflake block, I created a knit version for the Yarnstorm. Many thanks to Paula Velluto for test knitting the bulky version of this pattern. At this time, the pattern calls for bulky weight yarn, but there’s no reason you couldn’t take the basic instructions and work them in any gauge. Download the pattern on Ravelry to add it to your pattern library, or find this knit pattern on my web site.

As written, the pattern calls for a 10.5 US/6.5mm knitting needles and a total of about 190 yards of bulky weight yarn (110 yards Color A, 30 yards Color B and 50 yards Color C). The Victorian inscribed quilt is red and white, so you’d need 110 yards of red and 80 yards of white.

Worked in garter stitch with a stockinette border, the pattern begins at one corner, increases and works diagonally to the other corner. Stitches are picked up on both sides of the center block and out to the corners. Triangle stitches are picked up from the center and along the edges. Working in the round, the final border completes the square, which measures 20″.

Once the Yarnstorm passes, this block could be used to create cushions or a car seat/stroller blanket.

Go ahead and download the Melrose Snowflake Block now!

 

My Windows on Immigration Quilt

Annamaria Brenti reached out in May 2017 with details of her Finestre Migranti/Immigration Windows Quilt project. Did I want to participate?

“Of course!” I immediately responded.

As I write, I realize it is twenty years that I’ve known Annamaria. Our paths first crossed in Frascati, Italy when word traveled that a new quilter had moved to town. She was Italian, but began quilting in America. Having lived in several countries and traveled extensively, Annamaria’s curiosity and intensity observed and absorbed traditions from around the world. With this toolbox of skills and love of Italian history, her quilt vision blossomed.

A little aside: The oldest extant quilt (trapunto). is Italian The magnificent “Tristan Quilt” was made during the 1200s CE in Sicily. Quilts are layers of fabric with wadding that are held together with stitching.

Tristan Quilt V&A museum

The Tristan Quilt, from the collection of the Victoria & Albert Museum

Patchwork is the assembly of fabric pieces to create a flat surface. Patchwork quilts are a relatively recent (1800s) needlework tradition with roots in the US and England. The patchwork trend migrated to Europe as it gained popularity in the 1980s.

It was the beginning of patchwork’s popularity in the Castelli Romani. When Annamaria moved to Frascati, QuiltItalia, Italy’s national quilting organization, was a tiny bud. Patchwork led me to friendship with Silvana Zenatello di-Manzano, Madalena Lucchetti and Giovanna Mostardi. Days of patchwork, nights of group meals in Monteporzio Catone and exhibits in community arts centers gave my quilting an anchor as I explored techniques and considered my vision.

Since 1997, Monte Prozio Catone promotes patchwork and quilters.

Monte Porzio Catone

Annamaria shared her international experiences with the Castelli Romani quilters.  Around 1999, Annamaria and Silvanna drafted a friendship quilt pattern based on motifs found in Japanese iconography and Roman mosaics. Once the blocks were assembled from Japanese and Italian quilters, I hand quilted the silk and cotton quilt. In June 2001, Annamaria and the Castelli Quilters hosted the Japanese quilters and the friendship quilt was admired from all sides. Somewhere I have photos of that…

The Finestre Migranti/Immigration Windows Quilt project differs from other group quilt projects Annamaria’s organized. Annamaria wants worldwide perspectives on immigration within a framework. Past group projects implemented an already established pattern that was executed with individual contributions curated by Annamaria.

For the Finestre Migranti/Immigration Windows Quilt each quilt:

  • uses a variety of cathedral window shapes, both square and rectangular, in columns seven units tall
  • measures 90cm/36″ high and at least 150cm/60″ long
  • allows each quilter to mix and matches nine different columns configurations.

The framework gives complete control to individual interpretation while still linking each piece. Annamaria has been very successful in recruiting quilters from around the globe. The work will debut at the 2019 Verona Tessile. Annamaria, Silvanna and others maintain an active Facebook page where participants share photos of their process.

The framework was straightforward. The possibilities were endless. I decided to limit myself to the 150cm width. Annamaria, who thrives on making art in large scale that is filled with mesmerizing details, has declared that her quilt panel will be 177″ wide. I realized that the larger the quilt, the more difficult it would be for me to focus on my theme. My challenge would be to distill a theme and present it clearly within the 63 windows of my quilt?  What will my immigration windows quilt say?

When Annamaria contacted me, a poster from a fundraising appeal from the UNHCR stirred emotions each time I entered the kitchen. “The only thing stronger than fear is hope,” in large white letters topped this photo of an overcrowded boat filled with refugees. Massimo Sestini‘s award winning image resonated throughout the world. Immigration Windows quilt inspired by Massimo Sentini photo

The expressions of those passengers off the Libyan coast in 2014 vary. Some are happy, some preoccupied with children, some fearful and other look blankly at the camera. Many look cold and worried.

Initially I thought that the Mediterranean travels of refugees would anchor my quilt. Refugees are a world wide phenomenon. The flight and twisting journeys of those forced to flee cover the earth. Between 1997 and 2016, twice as many people live with forced displacement. The UNCHR estimated that more than 65 million people were refugees in 2016. That is a mind boggling number. The majority flew crises in Syria and South Sudan, and half of the refugees are children. Words like hope, movement, work, adaption, journey filled my inspiration list as I searched for my theme.

Of course, immigration issues in the United States frame the United States since colonial days. The first immigrants, the Pilgrims, fled religious persecution. Later, indentured servants and slaves came to the US for agricultural work. This tradition continues today. Our agricultural economy relies on immigrant labor; a fact that we may not see but touch every day with the food we eat. Upon learning that nearly half of the US farmworkers are illegal migrant workers, ideas started moving into focus. California industrial farming relied on migrant workers. Dairy farms in Wisconsin and Vermont rely increasingly on migrant workers. Small farms in Massachusetts are worried that immigration enforcement will prevent them from bringing product to market. Unless you grow all of your own food in the US, you rely on migrant workers. Without immigration reform, with a US administration that sees immigration as bad news for America, my quilt theme developed.

I’m still assembling my 63 blocks. Undoubtedly I will look at the structure and adjust my plan for the felted and stitched pieces I plan to insert into the cathedral windows. Using hand painted and commercial fabrics can sometimes be tricky, but my first finished window looks promising. Alanna Nelson Finestre Migranti Quilt Block with felt I haven’t picked the project up since April, but the next couple of weeks will focus on this. Block by block, I hope to have my immigration window quilt done by October.

If only we could reform our immigration system to acknowledge and support the people who work so hard to feed the United States by October….

Plantano, Sycamore, Planetree

Plantano, Sycamore, Planetree

Alanna Nelson observes detailsTree bark deserves a pause. For a statically significant portion of our lives together, my hub waits as I stop at another sycamore  (or plane tree or plantano, as it is known in Italian). Pulling out my camera, the bark’s earthy, rich textures and colors are a testament to the tree’s life journey. Snap! Another amazing specimen for my collection. Isn’t it magnificent?

Sycamore photography by Alanna NelsonYears ago, hub used to groan. Now he accepts and adapts, realizing that this is just part of our life together.

Why does the bark appeal to me? The bark layers explore the possibilities greens, browns and grey. The outer bark layers peel away in rounded amoeba-like shapes. I learned that young sycamore bark can conduct photosynthesis, allowing the tree a kick start in the spring. The distinct shaggy shedding reminds me of its never-ending evolution.

My Plantano tree photo fetish started when we enjoyed passeggiate (scenic pathways) and viale in Italian and French cities. Sycamores and plane trees grow quickly, cast a wide shade canopy and put up with compacted urban soil and air pollution. French and Italian communities prune the trees to emphasize a low, spreading branch habit, which gives a knobby, gangling sculptural impact to the walkways during winter.

Alanna Nelson admires Bellano plantano trees

Bellano winter waterfront with plantano trees snuggled between sidewalks and streets.

From the photos, I assembled fabric collections inspired by those colors and textures in an attempt to recreate this lovely texture and feeling of continual rebirth. While I’ve made a couple of quilts, there were more possibilities. This winter, I turned back to those fabric packets. Layering fabrics, sewing shapes and cutting away the “bark” created branches and trunks. I also “discovered” fabrics painted more than five years ago that matched those textures!
Alanna Nelson fiber art painted fabrics
As New England hunkered through a cold, wet April, watching two Plantano quilts grow on my studio wall kept me distracted. I’ll put them up in my Fiber Art Gallery soon!

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