This book is brought to you by the successful team behind the multi-award winning, stop-motion animation company Little Woolly Vision. The book was created by writer and designer Sarah Simi and animator Ed Hartwell, along with Leeanne Bell, a freelance crafter who has worked with them on many of their projects. Sarah makes lots of the puppets and sets for the Little Woolly Vision animations. She is also a knitter extraordinaire and the creator, director and producer of Nudinits, the world’s first all-knitted animation, which has also resulted in four best-selling Nudinits books (visit nudinits.com). Sarah lives in Florida, USA. Ed is an experienced filmmaker who wrangles the puppets into shape to produce the animations; Ed also arranges all the music and tests his ideas on his own two young daughters who often provide sound effects for the characters and animals. Ed lives in London, UK. Leeanne started making felt toys 10 years ago after becoming a stay-at-home mum. She has made many of the puppets and sets for the nursery rhyme animations and has written all of the patterns for Old MacDonald; making a pattern for a horse poo has been the highlight of her career to date! Leeanne lives in Glasgow, Scotland. Little Woolly Vision is a multi-award winning, stop-motion animation company specialising in making animation with wool, fabric and felt. Based in London, everything they do is made and animated by hand. They launched Little Woolly Vision with the aim of putting a new spin on nursery rhymes and to move away from the computer generated animation so often associated with children’s songs online. Every nursery rhyme on their channel is animated using traditional stop-motion techniques and each puppet and set hand sewn with felt; the songs are recorded live by musicians Steve Pretty and Gemma Storr, which all contributes to producing a heart-warming, nostalgic feeling in every song. Visit woollyvision.live-website.com or search for Little Woolly Vision on YouTube.
This is a wonderful little hardback book containing patterns and templates to make your own small fabric farmyard including a farmhouse which opens out make a farm play mat and barn and can be used to store all the characters inside and make it a soft portable toy. This is exactly the sort of toy I loved as a child and will happily make for my grandchildren. The set is based on the Little Woolly Vision animated nursery rhymes. The characters and the farmhouse can all be made of polyester felt with toy stuffing so safe for small children. I would consider adding some stabiliser to the house walls and roof to make it more stable. The book is colourful and well illustrated with easy to follow instructions. The templates for the animals and farmer are in the back and can be traced. There are even suggestions for additional accessories such as hay ales fences and animal poo! Brilliant book at excellent value for money I will definitely be making use of this one. * Jackie from Half Yard Sewing Club * This lovely little book actually looks like a children's nursery rhyme story book. However, within the pages are the instructions needed to make the characters, their clothes, and bring the Nursery Rhyme to life. Each character has full, easy to follow instructions, with the Nursery Rhyme running through the book. The illustrations are colourful, with many close ups of some of the more intimate details. Instructions are included to make a farmhouse with a play mat, to both play with and store the animals in. Details for hay bales and piles of animal are also included! All the pattern pieces are included at the back of the book, which can be traced or photocopied. They are also available as a download. Information relating to materials and tools needed, and example of stitches used are available at the front of the book. This book provides a very tactile way for young children to bring a favourite Nursery Rhyme to life. A lovely idea! * Jayne from Half Yard Sewing Club * WHAT A TREASURE This little book is ideal for beginners and professionals. All instructions are given, and information on all you will need to make these 10 little farm animals, and 4 farmyard features along with a Farmhouse. There are templates in the back of the book and also full instructions on stitches you will need to use. These are all made with felt which is so easy to sew with. A wonderful book for anyone who is learning to sew, a mother or a grannie who has young children in the family. It would make a lovely soft toy for all to enjoy. Under £10 and well worth the money. A very strong hard back book and has a barcode for you to watch a small animation of this lovely make. * Blodwen from Half Yard Sewing Club * I can not wait to get started, a super hardback smaller sized book full of animals and characters from the nursery rhyme ""Old MacDonald had a farm"". It even has a QR code to link you to the animation. Simple and clear colourful photographs for each make of 10 animals, Mrs MacDonald, her clothes and to complete the scene a barn with accessories and a playmat. A materials, tools and stitches section at the front and templates at the back of the book make this a handy guide to produce this this lovely item that any child would love, that is, if you can part with it. The book is portable enough to keep with you and make an item wherever you are. A beautifully presented book with detailed instructions. * Sandra from Half Yard Sewing Club * Sew Your Own Nursery Rhyme Old MacDonald by Sarah Simi is a book of full-size patterns and instructions on how to create the nursery rhyme Old MacDonald Had a Farm using felt as the main material and hand sewing. You will need other tools such as a craft knife, scissors, needle and thread, pins, hot glue gun all listed in the Materials & Tools chapter. As Sarah states if you’re a crafter you probably have these items in your tools, if not they are not expensive items to gather. The chapter on Stitches give instructions on the simple stitches used throughout the book such as backstitch, blanket stitch and whipstitch all not difficult to master. Patterns include the farmer, Old MacDonald and clothes; ten farm animals including a pig, a dog, a chicken, a duck, a sheep; features of the farm such as hay bales, bucket, fence panels and a design for a playmat to house them all in. Really inventive. The book has a hardback cover and is about a 7½ inch square so not large but each page is filled edge to edge and the pages are matt meaning no glare when working from it. And because of the book’s size the pattern templates for the farmhouse/playmat need enlarging but all other patterns are full-size. Step-by-step instructions are clear and come with photographs shot at various angles to help with construction. So far I’ve made the dog, which turned out not bad at all. Although I would have preferred diagrams with the instructions on exactly how/where to place the pattern pieces to save having to keep going back to the pattern template pages - I did figure it out in the end! Quite a nice hand-sewing project, and something easy to make with children. * Juliet from Half Yard Sewing Club * With a subtitle guaranteed to get readers humming even before page one, Simi and her fellow creators of the UK-based “Little Woolly Vision,” a YouTube TV series of stop motion animation nursery rhyme videos, translate their vision into these patterns for making your own three dimensional playthings. Sewers will appreciate that the 16-plus patterns are made of felt, one of the easiest materials to work with, and kids will love playing with the finished products as another way to experience the beloved rhymes. Each pattern, somewhat naïve in style, follows the same structure: materials needed, occasional tips (e.g., how to obtain an even blanket stitch), and step-by-step instructions. Actual full-size templates are found in the back, with the option to download from the web. Look for the random bit of humor (such as how to craft animal ""poo"") and a nod to modern mores (Old MacDonald is a she). -- Barbara Jacobs * Booklist *