This complete soap felting tutorial shows you exactly how to make bar soap covered with wool felt
Why put wool fiber on bars of soap, you ask? Great question! Because it makes a wonderful scrubby. You can exfoliate and wash your skin at the same time.
Not only is this a fun activity for you but it’s a great craft for kids, too. So, let me show you how to make felted soap.
The basic steps for making felted soaps:
- Gather supplies: Bar soap, wool roving, nylon hose, water
- Thin out the wool and wrap it around a bar of soap
- Place wrapped soap in the nylon hose
- Add water and work it with your hands
- Check the soap occasionally to prevent wool from felting into the hose
- Work the soap until wool is firmly felted and attached
What is felted soap?
Felt Soap is literally soap that is enclosed in felted wool. Basically, the wool is placed on a bar of soap and as you work it with water, the fibers felt together.
As you use the soap, the bar shrinks and the felt shrinks with it.
Materials and Tools
- Wool Roving (s.a. Sheep or Alpaca)
- Bar Soap or Olive Oil Soap (for Gifts!)
- Nylon Hose (Knee Highs work well)
- Water
How do you make felted soap?
Soap felting can get a little messy since you will be using water. So, before you begin, think about where you will be doing this. You can work the soap over a sink or a large bowl or cover your table with a plastic tablecloth.
This is also a great activity to do outdoors with your kids.
1. Prepare the wool roving
The first thing we have to do is prepare the wool roving. All this means is that we will thin it out.
Simply, take your roving and with your hands, spread it out just enough so you start to see through it. Not too thin, you don’t want gaps in your fiber or the soap will show.
Take a length of wool and wrap the it around the soap, tucking in the ends. Check for any holes in the fiber and add more as needed.
You can use one color of wool or many. You can make stripes or solids … whatever you like.
2. Felt the soap
Now, carefully place your soap inside one of the nylon knee highs. You can easily do this by holding the wool covered soap in one hand and stretching the nylon over it.
You need to be careful not to pull the wool off the soap. No worry if this takes you a few tries! Once it’s in there, secure the stocking with a loose knot.
Then, either over your sink or bowl, add some water and using your hands, gently begin working the water in. Do this all over the soap until the entire surface is thoroughly wet.
Work the wool for several minutes and then carefully pull back the nylon and check for spots where the soap is showing and add more fiber, if needed.
Place the soap back in the nylon and keep working the fiber. Make sure to work all surfaces and the corners.
Remove the soap from the nylon every couple of minutes to check the felting process and to make sure the nylon does not get felted into the wool.
When you can no longer pull apart the individual wool fibers, you can continue working the wool without the nylon.
Keep working the wool until it has shrunk and tightened around the soap. If it seems that your wool doesn’t want to felt, try ‘shocking’ it by alternating hot and cold water while you are working it.
Finally, just rinse off the suds and set your soap out to dry. This may take a day or two. Rotate your soap so the felt can dry on all sides.
3. Add needle felt designs (optional)
With this particular bar of soap, I first needle felted a simple star shape (see how in this tutorial). Then I lightly felted only the white wool onto the soap but only until the fibers were just starting to grab onto each other.
Finally, I added the star on top of the white and finished felting it until the wool completely enclosed the bar and the fibers could not be pulled apart.
Grab the E-Book!
How to make Felted Soaps
Soap Felting Step by step tutorial
(GET THIS E-BOOK PDF AND OCCASIONAL UPDATES)
How do you use felted wool soap?
Use these soaps the same way as a regular bar. If you have very dirty hands, you can scrub between the fingers and under the nails.
Note: After use, do not let them sit in water. You may wish to hang them up to dry. This will keep any mold from forming.
As I said before, these soaps are great scrubbies. They are wonderful for anybody who gets their hands dirty such as gardeners.
Also, felted soap works great for exfoliating your skin. In that case, you will want to use a higher quality soap such as scented lavender or olive oil soap.
What are the benefits of felted soap?
- Natural way to exfoliate your skin (when using natural colored wool and all natural soap)
- Great for removing dirt from hands for gardeners, mechanics, etc.
- After the soap is used, the leftover wool felt can be composted
- Make great gifts
Find more felting tutorials at What is Felting? A Beginner’s Guide and Needle Felting for Beginners
How long does felted soap last?
That really depends on how often you use it as well as how large your initial bar of soap is. As a general rule, one bar will last from about 4 months to as long as a year.
Related Wool Felting Articles
What is Felting? A Complete Beginner’s Guide
How to Needle Felt (for Beginners)
– Basic Felting
– How to Felt Wool – Cobweb Felting
– Nuno Felting
– Resist Felting
Wet Felt: Adding Color & Texture the Easy Way
How to: Lattice Felting
Wet Felted Easter Eggs
How to Make Felted Dryer Balls
DIY Wool Dryer Balls with Needle Felt Designs
Kristen B says
Huh, this is neat. I had never heard of felted soap. Pinned it.
admin says
Thank you Kristen!
Vicky c williams says
I felt my homemade soaps. I make cold processed and hot processed soaps and then felt over them. My question is that after a few uses my soaps are staying very soft almost like a gel. They do not dry out between uses. Any suggestions?
Annette says
That’s very interesting, Vicky. I’ve only felted over store-bought soap and have not had that issue. Would you be able to use less liquid in the soap you plan to felt?
Megan Walker says
This is a great beginner project for those of us interesting in felting (me), but slightly overwhelmed by the whole process! Thanks for sharing : )
admin says
This is a great one to start with. Also, it’s a good kids project.
Becky says
Great tutorial! I have seen these before, but have never made one. Might have to give it a try.
admin says
Let me know how it turns out!
Lara says
I’ve never seen anything like this before! Not only is it useful, it turned out really pretty, too. I’m pinning it so I can put it in my pile of projects to try. Thanks for sharing. π
admin says
You’re welcome!
Veronica Lee says
Thanks for sharing this! Gotta try this!
Hi! Stopping by from Mom Bloggers Club. Great blog!
Have a nice day!
admin says
Thanks Veronica, I’ll come find you over there π
Kayla says
WHOA! I didn’t know such a thing even existed. I’ve never tried felting, but I love making soap. This would take my spa baskets to a NEW level!
I’m not super familiar with felting though, is just rubbing and sprinkling with water what makes it felted? What happens to the felt as the soap shrinks with use?
admin says
These would be perfect for a spa basket, Kayla! Especially, if you felt over your handmade soap. It’s very easy, really. The two things that make fiber felt are extreme water temperature changes ….going from hot to cold, and agitation. Working it. Just like when you accidentally wash a favorite sweater and it comes out 10x smaller. The felt shrinks with the soap which is also great. Give it a try. If you have any questions, shoot me an email at kyblue (at) bellsouth (dot) net. Let me know how it turns out!
Nicole says
I’ve only recently seen felted soaps and you make it seem so easy! Thanks for sharing this!
admin says
You’re welcome! They are fun and easy enough for kids to do as well.
Museful Mom says
I’ve never heard of felted soap. That is awesome! I may have try it this project out. #ThrowbackThursdaylinkup
Heather @GeminiRed Creations says
What an interesting idea! I’ve never heard of (or thought of) doing this! I’ve been wanting to try felting, but didn’t think doing it on soap would be my first experience. Thanks for sharing on #throwbackthursdaylinkup
admin says
Felted soap is a great project to start with. Good activity for kids too. Thanks for popping by!
Amanda Smith says
This is adorable! I have never seen this done. These will make great gifts! I am pining this for later.
heidi says
It looks great, and you make it sound so easy. Visiting from Wake Up Wednesday Linky Party.
admin says
Thanks Heidi! I’m still making my rounds π
Nancy Keslin says
never felted soap before. looks like a fun project. visiting from the wake up wednesday linky.
admin says
Thanks Nancy! I’ll pop over to your site π
Bismah says
This is really neat! I will have to see about trying this sometime. Would definitely make great gifts. Thank you for sharing!
Annette says
Thank you! Let me know if you try it.
Katy Blevins says
I am so impressed by this! You make it look super easy and doable and the final product looks fantastic as well as super functional. Thanks for linking up at the #smallvictoriessundaylinky! You’ve been pinned to the group board. π
Annette says
Thank you!
Jen says
This is really interesting. I’ve never seen felted soap before but I can see how it would be great for exfoliating. I am interested in soap making and I’m pinning this for future reference. Your blog is pretty awesome too, by the way.
Annette says
Thanks Jen! Soap making is on my list too. Do you have a recipe?
Annette says
Thanks for sharing!
Andrea says
I’ve always wondered how it’s done. Thanks for sharing, I’ll try this one day. Store bought they’re very expensive!
Annette says
Yes, they are. Plus, they’re so much fun to make! Send me pic π
Annette