How to Make a Flannel Board

Posted by funfelt on Monday Aug 28, 2006 Under

How to Make a Flannel Board

Although I sell wonderful pre-printed educational felt boards and story figures through the home party business, Story Time Felts, I have found that making my own small plain flannel boards is a great way to present our product as gifts for hostesses or giveaways at home parties. Since children of all ages love working with felt and flannel board stories, I thought I’d share how to make a great flannel board gift. You can make your own felt figures or purchase some through Story Time Felts, but making your own plain felt board of any size is easy and economical! I am showing you how to make a “lap board” here, suitable for individual stories, but you can use the same techniques to make larger flannel boards for home or classroom. If you have any questions, let me know! Also, if you have your own ideas for making flannel boards or accessories, please add them to the Comments section! This is just one example of the many creative ideas I’ve seen out there!

Karen

How to Make a Flannel Board

Materials:

Stiff board, about 9″ x 12″ for a lap board. I used Coroplast but double walled cardboard (or 2 pieces glued together), masonite, or any other firm board works, too.

Fabric - flannel or felt, about 1.5 to 2 inches wider than your board

Adhesive: I really recommend 3M’s 777 Multipurpose Spray Adhesive

Scissors

Packing tape

Plastic wrap, 18 inch width

Step 1

Flannel Board with Fabric

Position your board on your fabric to make sure the sides are about evenly cut.

Step 2

Gluing the Flannel Board Fabric

Lift off the board and lightly spray the back of the fabric with the spray glue, then lay the board down again, centered where you want it.

Step 3

Flannel Board Corners
Fold up the straight edged sides of the fabric and smooth down across the back edges, leaving the corners to meet up and form “bunny ears.”

Step 4

Cutting the Flannel Board Corners

Take your scissors and snip off the “bunny ears” on each corner as close to the flannel board as you can. This will leave you with a nice mitered corner which will be flat.

Step 5

Cut Corners of the Flannel Board
All 4 corners cut. It is OK if they are not perfect! The front is what matters most. LOL
Step 6

Taping the back of the flannel board
Using packing tape, tape down the straight edges on all 4 sides of the back of the flannel board. The spray glue will help the fabric stick but the tape is a little extra reinforcement. If you are just using the flannel board yourself, you are done! Flip it over and have some fun! The following steps are for wrapping it up as a gift with felt board story figures.
Step 7

Plastic wrap to create a flannel board gift.

The following steps are if you are presenting this as a gift with felt board story figures. I am using the Story Time Felts figures for Brown Bear Brown Bear What Do You See? which will be a donation for a local fundraiser silent auction. Take the roll of plastic wrap and put it at one end of the table and unroll at least twice the length of the flannel board you are wrapping.

Step 8

Laying out your flannel board story figures to be wrapped.

Lay your finished flannel board on the plastic wrap toward one end and lay out your felt story figures. You may want to insert text of the story or other information under the back side of the flannel board. As a Story Time Felts Consultant, I am sure to insert my catalog and contact information at this step, but I omitted that in these pictures.

Step 9

Cutting the plastic wrap for your flannel board.

Bring the other end of the plastic wrap over the top of the flannel board to meet the other side, then cut with scissors, with 1 to 2 inches left on the side to wrap tightly to the underside of the flannel board.

Step 10

Front of the wrapped flannel board.

After pulling the cut side of the plastic wrap tightly and sticking it on the back, pull the top and then the bottom of the plastic wrap and stick it to the back on those edges. This gives the front of your flannel board gift a nice finished look.

Step 11

Back of wrapped flannel board.

The back of your wrapped flannel board will be covered and can be taped down if you wish.

Step 12

Finished flannel board gift.

Voila! Your beautiful flannel board gift is ready to present to one lucky child! For suggestions for great felt board story figures, be sure to visit my Story Time Felts website. Our Figures to Tell collection works especially well with this sized board and do not already come with a flannel board to use. Have fun and please leave us suggestions or comments!

15 Responses to “How to Make a Flannel Board”

  1. Karen Dempsey Says:

    Awesome instructions! Any time I’ve given these as a child’s present, the kids *and* parents were thrilled. This is my kind of “software”!!!

  2. Awnya Boam Says:

    Great pictures and discriptions! It almost makes the entire process seem easy!!

  3. Atiya Says:

    Superb step by step explanations with pictures - being one not too gifted in the arts and crafts I took the courage and with your intructions have made now over 5 boards. My kids love it they want all their friends to have one!!

    Thank you very much.

  4. Kathy Says:

    Have been wondering how to make a felt board. Thank you very much for the instructions. Should be fun to make and my grandkids will love it.

    Happy Holidays!

  5. Colleen Smith Says:

    Thanks! this just solved a big problem I had. A customer ordered the figures to tell set and now wants a board. Didn’t know if I had time to order her one by Christmas. Now I can just teach her how to make her own and I bet I’ll sell more felts that way!

  6. Faye Alspaugh Says:

    I am hunting a spray for paper so it will stick to our flannel board. We teach in the Good News Club organization after school. Maybe you have heard of it. They took prayer and everything else to do with it our of school, but now we can teach the kids about Christ after shool. We have about 35 in our class, and have a flannel board, but have found many thing we can print off some good Christian sites, but are hunting the adhesive to spray on them to stick on the board. Our last lesson book came with figures we had to cut out and was already coated with the adhesive to work with them. We have more ideas and would like to use them on our board. Thanks for your help!

  7. melissa Says:

    I was thinking of making a felt background out of only the felt material.If I double layer a 25 by 25 sheet of felt and whipstitch them together then sew loops across the top and slide a dowel rod in the loops like hanging a curtain.then the whole piece can be rolled up and stood in a corner out of the way . I could also tie a rope to each end of the dowel rod and hang it from a hook or door knob .do you think this will work or will it have to be sturdier for the felt to stick?

  8. funfelt Says:

    Faye - You can use the 3M adhesive and make it “repositionable” by spraying the paper lightly on the back and letting it dry. This makes it tacky and reusable. I have done this before for paper or photos and it works great! If you adhere it right away after spraying, it will be permanent so let it “dry” first and you can use it on the paper if you spray very lightly. Check the can, there are even instructions for it! It kind of makes it like stickey note adhesive! Have fun!

  9. funfelt Says:

    Melissa - I think that would work BUT in my experience the felt background needs to be held at an angle, so keeping it vertical like hanging from a doorknob may not work as the pieces would fall off. You could just have the sewn-together felt on a dowel and lay it across an easel or back of your sofa or something tho, rolling it up for storage or even hanging it up to get it out of the way but I don’t know if you could actually use it for a felt board hanging up.

    Hey everyone here’s an idea for a vertical felt board I learned from a preschool teacher - if you use ASTROTURF - the shorter pile kind - you can put it on a wall or anything else vertical and ANYthing will stick to it!! LOL It is kind of funky to be using “grass” for a felt board but it really works! So there’s another idea for you. You can just get a rectangle of it and roll it up when you are done, or you can “wallpaper” part of your wall with it! It even comes in different colors. She said you can get it at hardware stores or department stores, I know we have some we use with our trailer as a “porch” that is a pretty blue color! LOL

    Thanks for reading!
    Karen

  10. Teresa Says:

    Thank you for leaving the links to your site on our blog! These are great sites and very useful & helpful. Thank you, thank you!

  11. funfelt Says:

    You are welcome, Teresa! I really enjoyed your blog and sent the link to my team as an example of a great family blog, because I’ve been trying to tell them how much fun blogging is! I’ll keep you and your family in my prayers.
    Karen

  12. Rochelle Says:

    I’m confused. I went to the fabric store today to look at felt. I tried to stick the small felt squares to a larger peice of felt and the thing just fell off. Am I suppose to buy felt or flannel. What am I doing wrong here? I’m scared the felt peices I’m planning to buy won’t stick to my “unstickable” felt board. What the heck am I doing? LOL

    Thanks

    Mommy to triplet 3 year olds. :)

  13. funfelt Says:

    Hi Rochelle! The felt board you are sticking the smaller felt to should be held at an angle and it will work better if it is on a board. Did you try that? I work with the felt from Story Time Felts which is a little thicker but I have also used regular felt from the craft store and not had a problem. Regular flannel (like for pajamas) works great too, so maybe the angle is the problem? You could also look for “glitter” felt - it is a little rougher (and pretty!) and would grab the felt more. I like the black with glitter - looks like a night time sky! The main thing is the board needs to be held at a slight angle so gravity is working with you along with the friction! Good luck, I hope you can get it to work!

  14. Pam Says:

    Rochelle,

    You can use sandpaper or velcro on the back of the felt pieces to make them stick along with spray adhesive that makes them sticky on the backs. Hope that helps.

  15. funfelt Says:

    The only thing about sandpaper or velcro is that they will snag the felt on the felt board itself so it gets hairy and fuzzy. A really fine sandpaper can be OK but try it out on the back of the felt board or something that doesn’t show first!
    Karen

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