Monday, June 29, 2015

Felt product export and buy from Nepal

felt product export and Buy from Nepal

Nepal felt product collection and manufacture, Felt product handicraft Nepal, Varieties of felt handicraft export from Nepal, Felt product trader and whole seller in Nepal, Felt product Shipping and buying cost, Felt product cost in Nepal,felt product export rates and prices  Agaman Export International"Memorable Handicraft" Specialized the felt product manufacture and world wide distributor. We promote the local handicraft and local  hand craft artists. It support their living, School fee of the children, life in Kathmandu.  Lets buy Nepalese product for encouraging traditional artists aura of the Nepalese. 

Felt Bags

Felt bags| wholesale felt handbag| felt bags from Nepal| Nepal felting bags| felt bag suppliers| felted handbag patterns| felt tote bag| felt shoulder bags| distributor of felt bags| knitted felted bags| felt shoulder bag| Nepal felt bags| wool felt gift bags
We have years of experience in making fabulous and fashionable felt bags. They are all hand crafted and come in all shapes and sizes: shoulder bags, handbags, tote, bags, shopping bags etc. we can make up any small bag or purse to your individually specified design, style in your choice of colors. They make wonderful and very memorable gifts for people of all ages. Let your imagination go and send us any design of felt burse or bag and we will apply our wealth of experience to the realization of your own idea.



Felt shoes and Slippers 

felt shoes| wholesale felt shoes| felt slippers| wool shoes from nepal| winter felt shoes| wholesale baby felt shoes | Wool felt shoes| winter shoes| indoor shoes| felt slippers| funky felt shoes| warm shoes| wool felt shoes| Nepal felt shoes| felt shoes from Nepal| Baby Felt Shoes| women?s shoes| wool shoes| Nepal felt shoes| felt shoes suppliers| shoes beautifeel| feet shoes| wholesale felt funky shoes|
felt shoes| wholesale felt shoes| felt slippers| wool shoes from nepal| winter felt shoes| wholesale baby felt shoes | Wool felt shoes| winter shoes| indoor shoes| felt slippers| funky felt shoes| warm shoes| wool felt shoes| Nepal felt shoes| felt shoes from Nepal| Baby Felt Shoes| women?s shoes| wool shoes| Nepal felt shoes| felt shoes suppliers| shoes beautifeel| feet shoes| wholesale felt funky shoes| Handmade woolen felt shoes are one of the best selling felt products from Nepal. Our indoor winter felt shoes helps you keep warm and comfort inside your home. Whether you want to have extra thick booties or thin fashionable slipper, all kinds of felt shoes are available for all age sizes, color and design. Here we offer different design handmade felt shoes




felt Purses


Whether it is a exquisite evening bag or a highly fashionable funky mobile phone cover, a fabulous notions bag, a distinctive money/coin purse or colorful pencil case - these products make a very special gifts for all ages. All kinds of small purses are available in your own colors and styles. Dream up and send us your own design and we will be happy to create them for you. We have years of experience. We offering you varieties of accessories case, money purse or coin purse and pencil case for the kids all made of handmade woolen felt.
 
 


Felt mat
Handmade felt mat shopping | felt mat  whole seller| Felt mat production in Nepal | felt mat exporting cost from Nepal| Felt mat export from Nepal.



There are excellent felt mat product in Nepal which is completely made by the hand.


FELTED WOOLEN PRODUCTS What is Felt?


Felt is a fabric made of wool fibers or animal hair matted together by steam and pressure without spinning, weaving or knitting. Such fibers include wool, fur and certain other hair fibers that mat together under appropriate conditions because of their peculiar structure and high degree of crimp. How are felt products produced? After carding, the fibers are dyed to acquire the required colors. At present we work with 42 different colors. Dyeing can be done by hand or by machine, but machine dyeing is more practical for fast color. Some of the colors on the screen or even the pictures are quite different than the physical colors. Upon completion of the coloring process, our skilled laborers compress the raw material by hand with the help of soap & hot water. Our felt products are 100% handmade and are free of chemical additives. While still wet, the felt is shaped into the pattern of the intended product. The shaping is done by hand without sewing or patching. Hand manipulation and rubbing in combination with the application of hot water achieve the desired shape. The shaped felt items then are sun-dried. After drying, final shaping and joining may require gluing and/or sewing, according to the design. You can see some pictures of the people working to make felt items. All our felt products are fair trade items produced by low-income and displaced workers, primarily female urban dwellers. Our Nepal felt products are felt accessories, felt balls, felt balls rugs, felt slippers, felt bag, felt tea coasters, felt hair band, felt key rings, felt ropes and sheets. Purchasing these felt products serves to help support these workers, who depend on such programs to improve their lives.
Felt is a textile that is produced by matting, condensing and pressing fibres together. Felt can be made of natural fibres such as wool or synthetic fibres such as acrylic. There are many different types of felts for industrial, technical, designer and craft applications. While some types of felt are very soft, some are tough enough to form construction materials. Felt can vary in terms of fibre content, colour, size, thickness, density and more factors depending on the use of the felt.

Many cultures have legends as to the origins of felt making. Sumerian legend claims that the secret of feltmaking was discovered by Urnamman of Lagash. The story of Saint Clement and Saint Christopher relates that while fleeing from persecution, the men packed their sandals with wool to prevent blisters. At the end of their journey, the movement and sweat had turned the wool into felt socks.

Feltmaking is still practised by nomadic peoples (Altaic people:Mongols;Turkic people) in Central Asia, where rugs, tents and clothing are regularly made. Some of these are traditional items, such as the classic yurt (Gers), while others are designed for the tourist market, such as decorated slippers. In the Western world, felt is widely used as a medium for expression in textile art as well as design, where it has significance as an ecological textile.

Contents
1 Felting methods
1.1 Wet felting
1.2 Needle Felting
1.3 Carroting
2 Uses
3 Bibliography
4 See also
5 External links

Felting methods
Wet felting
Wet felting is one of several methods which can produce felt from wool and other animal fibres. Warm soapy water is applied to layers of animal hairs placed at 90 degree angles to one another. Repeated agitation and compression causes the fibres to hook together into a single piece of fabric. Wrapping the properly arranged fibre in a sturdy, textured material, such as a bamboo mat or bubble wrap, will speed up the felting process. After the wet felting process is complete, the felted material may be finished by fulling.

Only certain types of fibre can be wet felted successfully. Most types of fleece, such as those taken from the alpaca or the Merino sheep, can be put through the wet felting process. One may also use mohair (goat), angora (rabbit), or even dog hair. These types of fibre are covered in tiny scales, similar to the scales found on a strand of human hair. Wetting and soaping the fleece causes the scales to open, while agitating them causes them to latch onto each other, creating felt. Plant fibres and synthetic fibres will not wet felt.

There are two famous artists who use wet felting as their media for their artwork pieces that are well known these days: one of them is Nicola Brown, who uses this style of art in order to create decorative landscapes for children novels and the other one is Claudia Jean Nelson, which uses this style of art for a different reason; her reason is to create all kinds of different imaginative dresses (for exposition) and other decorative ornaments (such as bags, teddy bears, wall decorations and book cover decorations).

Needle Felting

Needle felting is a popular fibre arts craft that creates felt without the use of water. Special needles that are used in industrial felting machines are used by the artist as a sculpting tool. While erroneously referred to as "barbed" needles, they in fact have notches along the shaft of the needle that grab the top layer of fibres and tangle them with the inner layers of fibres as the needle enters the wool. Since these notches face down towards the tip of the needle, they do not pull the fibres out as the needle exits the wool. Once tangled and compressed using the needle, the felt can be strong and used for creating jewellery or sculpture. Finer details can be achieved with this method using a hand-held tool with either a single needle or a small group of needles (2-5), so it is popular technique for producing 2D and 3D felted work.


Carroting

From the mid-17th to the mid-20th centuries, a process called "carroting" was used in the manufacture of good quality felt for making men's hats. Beaver, rabbit or hare skins were treated with a dilute solution of the mercury compound mercuric nitrate. The skins were dried in an oven where the thin fur at the sides turned orange, the colour of carrots. Pelts were stretched over a bar in a cutting machine, and the skin was sliced off in thin shreds, with the fleece coming away entirely. The fur was blown onto a cone-shaped colander and then treated with hot water to consolidate it. The cone then peeled off and passed through wet rollers to cause the fur to felt. These 'hoods' were then dyed and blocked to make hats. The toxic solutions in the dye and the vapours it produced resulted in widespread cases of mercury poisoning among hatters.

Uses

Felt is used everywhere from the automotive industry and casinos , to musical instruments and home construction as felt paper. It is often used as a damper. In the automotive industry, for example, it damps the vibrations between interior panels and also stops dirt entering into some ball/cup joints. Felt is used on the underside of a car bra to protect the body. Gaskets are also often made of felt. Felt gaskets can be used for: seals, washers, spacers, stripping, discs, anti-vibration and anti-squeak pads, bumpers, bushings, noise reduction linings, vibration mounts, shock dampeners, heat barriers, wipers, oil and grease retainers, dust and fuel oil filters, sound deadening, padding, insulation, plugs, light seals, lamp bases, lubrication wicking, dust shields and filters.

Many musical instruments use felt. On drum cymbal stands, it protects the cymbal from cracking and ensures a clean sound. It is used to wrap bass drum and timpani mallets. Felt is used extensively in pianos; for example, piano hammers are made of wool felt around a wooden core. The density and springiness of the felt is a major part of what creates a piano's tone. As the felt becomes grooved and "packed" with use and age, the tone suffers. Felt is placed under the piano keys on accordions to control touch and key noise; it is also used on the pallets to silence notes not sounded by preventing air flow.

Felt is used for framing paintings. It is laid between the slip mount and picture as a protective measure to avoid damage from rubbing to the edge of the painting. This is commonly found as a preventive measure on paintings which have already been restored or professionally framed. It is widely used to protect paintings executed on various surfaces including canvas, wood panel and copper plate.

A felt-covered board can be used in storytelling to small children. Small felt cutouts or figures of animals, people, or other objects will adhere to a felt board, and in the process of telling the story, the storyteller also acts it out on the board with the animals or people. Puppets can also be made with felt. Felt pressed dolls were very popular in the nineteenth century and just after the first world war.

German artist Josef Beuys used felt in a number of works.

During the 18th and 19th centuries gentlemen's top hats made from beaver felt were quite popular. In the early part of the 20th century, cloth felt hats, such as fedoras, trilbies and homburgs, were worn by many men in the western world.


No comments:

Post a Comment