| FELT
BOARD FUN
Introduction
A felt board (also
known as a flannel board) is simply a board covered with felt
on which a child or an adult can place felt pieces to make
pictures or tell stories. Felt boards are available to buy
in a variety of sizes. Small boards are ideal for play alone
activities (fuzzy felt boards for example) and larger boards
are designed for teaching and storytelling. My children have
enjoyed listening, participating and telling their own stories
using a felt board.
I made my own
large storytelling felt board using stiff cardboard which
I covered with green furry sticky back plastic (bought in
Focus Do It All). I sized the board to fit on my children's
art easel (Early Learning Centre). The giant felt pieces were
made with the help of my computer as follows:
Tools
T-shirt transfer
paper
Thin white felt
Graphics application (MS Paint will do)
Scanner (optional)
Iron
Method
The basic technique
involves printing a set of images onto T-shirt transfer paper
and then transferring the images onto the felt using a hot
iron. Once cooled, the backing paper is removed and the individual
images are cut out.
First prepare
the images you wish to use as felt pieces. For this you will
need a graphics application such as MS Paint. Images can be
sourced from the internet (clipart for example) or can be
scanned in (images from story books for example). However
the images are generated they all require the same treatment.
First consider
the size of the images. If using them for storytelling then
the larger the better up to a maximum size of about 15cm square
(any larger and you may find them difficult to keep on the
board). For table top felt boards smaller pieces work better.
The next thing to consider is how they will be cut out. Intricate
shapes are extremely difficult to cut accurately and may be
best left with a border of about 2mm. For this to work, it
is necessary to crop the image carefully in the graphic application
so that the finished felt piece has a white border around
it. Shapes that can be cut accurately from the felt do not
need such careful cropping in the image editor as the real
scissors will do this for you; so don't waste time picking
the image out in the graphics application.
Once you are happy
with the images you wish to use, squeeze as many of them as
you can into a single image the size of the transfer paper.
This will minimize paper wastage. Print a low resolution test
page on ordinary paper to check all is as expected. If the
test page is okay then load the transfer paper, adjust the
printer settings for T-shirt transfer paper and print.
Hints:
The transfer method
results in a mirror image of your artwork so make sure anything
that is reflection sensitive (in particular text) is reversed
before printing.
I have found no
problem with roughly cutting the images to size from the transfer
paper and then individually ironing them onto the felt; removing
the backing paper is a little tricky.
The surface of
the felt pieces will be shiny and so trying to stick felt
pieces on top of each other will not work.
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