I'm back to throwing it in the compost heap as well now, although Wattle-Birds nesting in the tree ferns in my garden, take the hair from the compost and recycle it into woven blankets to line their nests.
Detailed stuff is difficult for me lately as I have optic atrophy. Reading the forum is tough! One eye can't even recognise print, and the other eye does weird things to compensate at times, so my focus goes out of wack and hard to match facial features. Being more comic characters its easier to get away with. I found it helpful to take pics of the faces, to see from a different perspective. A good thing is that if you make a mistake, for example with an eye, it can be just pulled out and done again.
Maybe a long haired cat Roxy.
I'm sure my dog's hair would spin well, but I'd need a herd to make anything!
I only clip his coat once a year, and last year I used it, but some hairs were too short, so when I jabbed the skin colour over it, his hairs kept popping out!
Now I use a core wool of merino, in a rougher grade, then cover with a skin coloured wool.
All you'd need to start is a block of firm foam, (just an off cut will do), felting needles, (best in 3 grades for light, medium and heavy jabs) and some wool from a craft shop. Probably around a tenner all up, to get you started. Then, they say around the traps, “happy feltingâ€Â!
Nick, glad to hear you've tried it :-) I imagine it would be easy to do things similar to bark painting with it. The barbed felting needles would make it easier to stick fibres in place and blend colours. “Hair of the dog†is an expression to take another drink (next morning), to ease a hangover.
mile: