To keep your wool and linen wall hanging looking its best, a bit of of care is needed. Care for your wall hanging Iron the background Transport may cause wrinkles in the linen and flatten the wool. You can iron the linen on an ironing board or lay the wall hanging flat on the ground.… continue reading
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Mulesing; a painful price for cheap wool
Merino wool is a very fine wool fiber which makes the wool soft to the touch, a favorite in the textile sector. Merino wool comes from Australia. The rules are less strict in the field of animal welfare than in the Netherlands and therefore cheaper to keep sheep. The Merino sheep was bred in Australia… continue reading
Wool; so fantastic and can save the world
The secret of wool is the structure, when you look at a wool hair under the microscope you can see scales along the hair. This allows wool to felt (see this article on the explanation of felting) and insulate extremely well; air gets stuck between the scales and forms a ‘windbreak’. This air barrier also… continue reading
Why we forgot our beautiful local wool
At the moment, Dutch sheep’s wool is a waste product that has almost no destination. 1.5 million kilos of wool is burned every year. The Netherlands once had a prosperous wool processing industry, but now the demand for Dutch wool has completely disappeared. Natural fabrics have been replaced in recent years by synthetic – cheap… continue reading
Felting, an ancient craft, connects you to the earth
Wet felting The technique I use for making the Halona wool wall hangings is called felting. Felting can be dry or wet. For large surfaces, such as the woolen wall hangings, use wet felting The felting process Wet felting is a technique with which you can make a piece of fabric, or in this case… continue reading