Flannel Board Tutorial by Jonah Lisa Dyer

CanCan, 13 December 2008,
Categories: Frugal, Guest posts
Tags: , , ,

This is a guest post from Jonah Lisa Dyer, blogger and crafter extraordinaire at The Toby Show! Enjoy!

Flannel Board Tutorial

I made this flannel board for our new playroom this weekend.  Huck loves it!  It is so easy and cheap and I bet kids who are old enough to use scissors would be able to help by making the felt shapes for it.

DSC07087

I had always seen them done with black backgrounds but as I was reading around the internet on flannel boards it seemed that lots of people thought light blue was more versatile.  I had to agree and found this nice cloud-like  light blue flannel at my fabric store that fit the bill.

I also made a simple drawstring bag for all the felt pieces.  I even went the extra (extra crazy) step of lining it with satin so the felt pieces will come out easier.  <eye roll> Don’t ask me what I was thinking.

DSC07110

Click “Continue reading” below for a tutorial on how I made ours.  You should be able to click on any of the small thumbnail photos and get a bigger picture if you need to see a little more detail.

**Wanted to add that I’m also thinking of doing a traveling flannel board.  It would basically be a fabric envelope that closes with a zipper.  A fun cotton print on one side and flannel on the other.  Probably some interfacing to make it hold shape.  And, okay, probably lined in satin.  The felt pieces would be kept inside.  Would be great for the car, especially road trips..  Anyway, might be a good idea for anyone not interested in doing a full board for the house.  I’ll post when (well, if) I get around to it.

Flannel Board Tutorial

Supplies:

DSC07047

Foam Board or Cardboard
1/2 yard of flannel
1/2 yard of batting
Scissors
Stapler

Ribbon

Felt Scraps

You can recycle cardboard for this project but, and this is crazy, we made a recycling run recently and I didn’t have any.  I used foam board.  It comes in 30×20 pieces for about $4.  I cut it in half, giving me two 15×20 pieces.  If you have multiple kids, you might even want to go ahead and make two to cut down on those adorable screams of “Mine!”

You don’t have to use the batting.  None of the examples I saw online did, but I wanted the look and feel of a padded surface.  I cut the batting to the exact size of the foam board and spray mounted it to the board.  You could easily get away without mounting it or you could just tape it or glue the corners.  I just thought it would be easier to work with that way.

DSC07045

I cut the flannel 2 inches wider than the board on all 4 sides.

I started with one long side.  I turned the fabric under about a 1/2 inch then folded it onto the back of the foam board and stapled it at 3-4 inch intervals.  Occasionally a staple would go all the way through the fabric on the front.  When that happened I just pulled it out and restapled.  You can also eliminate this step completely and use duct tape.

DSC07048

At the corners, I pulled the fabric over at the point, stapled it, then cut it across the get rid of the excess. That’s called something but I’m not sure what.  Mitering?

DSC07049 DSC07050

DSC07052

Once I had one long side and it’s two corners done, I did the same on the opposite long side.  But before I stapled, I pulled it taut and made sure there weren’t any wrinkles on the front.  Then I did those 2 corners, and then the 2 short sides, pulling taut and checking the front throughout the process.

DSC07053

Now you have a finished flannel board.  You can frame it if want or put a picture mount on the back.  I just sewed a loop of white ribbon on the back.  I wanted it to be portable and able to hang it on a doorknob, dresser knob or hook.

DSC07054

Now you need some felt pieces for it.

I just used scrap craft felt.  I started with the big, brightly colored shapes in the very first photo.  I felt like that would be most age appropriate for the kind of play a two-year-old would be doing on this.

DSC07065

Then I made a bunch of other shapes for creating pictures.  They’re all still shapes but there’s a big variety–many different sizes and colors of every shape, plus arches, half-circles, long skinny pieces, clouds, trunks and tree tops, etc.

The two different sets of shapes are really all we’re keeping in the bag and playing with right now.

But I’m also making a few story sets.  Not sure how interested he’ll be in these right now.  So far I’ve done a Little Red Riding Hood set and have started on a Goldilocks and the Three Bears set.

DSC07061

DSC07063

If he’s into us telling stories this way, or later if he doesn’t like it right now, I have plans to do Peter Rabbit, Jack & the Beanstalk and Hansel & Gredel sets, too.

The great things about the sets is that you’ll have most of what you need from the shapes–like tree pieces, houses, water, rectangles for beds, etc.  And if you just make a variety of nekkid people you can change out the hair and clothes for the different stories.  I used fabric paint and made different faces on each side.

DSC07068

Yes, I briefly considered making them anatomically correct.  But even I’m not that good with a pair of scissors.

Hope you have fun with this project.  We’re loving ours.

…………………………………………………………………………….

Want to see what we’ve made for the flannel board recently?  Check out my Felt Story Sets and Changing Seasons Set

Submit Article: Digg | Google Bookmarks | Add to Technorati Favorites | kirtsy | Stumble It! | Del.icio.us

Comments

5 Responses, Leave a Reply
  1. 1 Erin
    13 December 2008, 11:09 am

    Oh I’m definitely making this when Charlie’s a little older. I’ve been checking out boards like this and they’re ridiculously expensive. Thank you for posting this!

  2. 2 Jenn
    13 December 2008, 12:55 pm

    What a cute idea! I’ll have to try this for my kids sometime (after Christmas when I HAVE time, haha).

  3. 3 Megan@SortaCrunchy
    13 December 2008, 1:39 pm

    Great tutorial! I love the shapes and characters you created. Did you use templates for those (the characters particularly) or just free-hand?

    Megan@SortaCrunchys last blog post..Troubleshooting and Testing (with a big dose of GRRRRRR)

  4. 4 a thorn among roses
    14 December 2008, 1:26 am

    this is a great idea…and i love the loop.

  5. 5 Kristin
    14 December 2008, 11:02 pm

    That looks like so much fun! Kai would love it, and it’s so easy.

Leave a Reply:

Name *

Mail (hidden) *

Website

Search

Write a word and hit enter key.

Categories

Connect

Mom Most Traveled on Twitter
Technorati Profile
My LinkedIn Profile

Friends

go natural baby

Travel Blog Sites - Top 100
Featured on
Travel Blog Sites.com

Link to Us

Mom Most Traveled
Expat Women - Helping Women Living Overseas



Featured Travel Blog on TravelPod.com
ss_blog_claim=1faf40faaf56206f590fa1c24170fd74