you get the wool fibres and wet it and make it a little soapy and then you roll it around in your hands until it goes into a hard ball. you should then wait for it to dry and this is felt
Wool fibres attach to each other when wool is agitated in water. The fabric structure then, is very tight wool fibres.
All pure wool will felt, because the fibres naturally bind together more tightly when agitated in hot water.
Yarn is made of fibres twisted together. These fibres or filaments are made of sheeps wool. :)
Wool can be made from the fleece of sheep, alpacas, mohair, cashmere.
I think the answer to that is all wool felt is made of wool. Nowadays, perhaps one should regard all non-woven fabrics as felt, irrespective of fibre origin.There is a product known as roofing felt, and this is made of a mat (the felt) of synthetic fibres, impregnated with tar.
Crochet is a style of needlework that can produce blankets of wool, linen, cotton, silk or a combination of these natural fibres, or made from synthetic fibres or combinations of natural fibres and synthetic fibres.
Animals that grow fur coats produce the raw fibres of wool.
Wool Felt is a company that sells felt made of wool. Wool Felt manufactures many different types of wool felt. They come in numerous different colors, thicknesses, and sizes.
Wool is a natural fiber obtained from animals such as sheep, goats, and alpacas. It is not a synthetic fiber, which is man-made from chemical compounds.
A peacoat is made from wool which is a natural insulator. The wool fibres are crimped, which trap tiny pockets of air, and the heat is trapped by these fibres like a blanket.
Because the microscopic fibres of wool trap air, which warms up on contact with a person's body.
Both ! Silk and wool are both natural fibres. In their 'raw' state they are 'pure' and contain no artificial fibres. However, they can be mixed with man-made threads to increase their strength.