Needle felted Eurasian Curlew brooch
£18.00
Materials – card, metal, brooch, plant dyed wool, polymer clay, glass eye, wool. The back has an ‘antique bronze’ metal brooch pin. The card backing is upcycled card and paper, typewritten.
Dimensions – Height: 6.4 cm; Width: 6.5 cm; Depth: 1.3 cm.
Description – First created in honour of World Curlew Day (April 21st). These brooches can be made to order needle felted British EURASIAN CURLEW brooch.
To look after your brooch, we recommend keeping it out of direct sunlight and protect it from dust and insects. When not wearing for a long period of time, keep in an airtight container with cedar wood or strong dried herbs.
Holly Thompson uses the dry needle felting technique to sculpt these felt miniature waders. This requires stabbing the wool with a barbed needle until it felts and shaping the form over time.
She uses locally sourced Cumbrian sheep wool and, to achieve the colours, she hand dyes the wool using natural plants – eco-friendly and sustainable. Dyes include onion skins, tea, coffee, sloe, avocado seeds and more!
The wood is foraged from naturally fallen branches. The beak is hand sculpted from a polymer clay and painted, and the legs are made from wire.
My work is as natural, eco-friendly and zero waste as possible to be kind to the environment and all it’s wonderful creatures. I use fully reused, recycled packaging to post your item to you.
Holly and her work featured in Wader Quest The Newsletter Vol 7 Issue 1 2020
For each painting sold through Wader Quest we will receive a donation (30% of the value) from the artist.
Note: Being handmade, your purchase may differ a little from the one pictured here as it will be made especially for you. It will therefore be unique but will still have the same attention to detail as the pictured example.
Commissions accepted – If you’d like a different species making, please contact Holly Thompson
Due to the natural dyes used, the colour may alter over time. To look after your felt wader it is recommend to keep it out of direct sunlight (this may bleach the colours). To protect it from dust and moths, you might like to keep it under glass – e.g. a bell jar, and cedar wood nearby can discourage insects and moths.
These sculptures contain glass eyes and are not toys.
All photos on this page © Holly Thompson
This item is available online for shipping to the UK only. If you are overseas and wish to purchase this, please contact us.