Meet the Maker Crafting Stunning Home Accents from Handmade Felt

Fog & Fury founder Kristin Colombano creates beautiful, tactile upholstery, pillows, and home accents from handcrafted felt in rich, earthy colors

Fog & Fury founder Kristin Colombano. Photo: Maren Caruso

The first time Kristin Colombano experienced what she’ll now describe as “real” felt, in a tiny shop in Mongolia, she didn’t realize it would become her life’s work. “When I was in that shop in Ulaanbaatar, it felt really different,” she recalls, comparing the handmade material she discovered there to the craft and industrial varieties she had previously experienced. “I had a bit of an ‘aha’—I didn’t walk away going ‘I’m going to make felt now’ but that was a real changing point.”

Though the felt she saw in Mongolia wasn’t quite her aesthetic (“very crafty, not very elegant”), the impact lingered.

Person smiling while holding a decorative pillow, standing against a light-colored wall.
Kristin Colombano. Photo: Heidi Zumbrun

Back in San Francisco, searching for art classes for her children, she stumbled across an adult felting workshop. “That’s when my problems began,” she jokes. “It’s a love affair, essentially. I really love making this. The more I make it, and the more I think about it, I realize that I chose it and it chose me.”

Cozy armchair with a textured orange pillow, draped with soft gray and white blankets, in a warmly lit living room.
Fog & Fury Flare pillow and Brush blanket. Photo: Heidi Zumbrun
Artist working with yellow fibers on a large table in a sunlit studio with wooden beams and organized shelves.
Artisan Kristin Colombano at work making a saffron-color felt. Photo: Courtesy of Fog & Fury

What began as an exploration quickly became an obsession. After that inaugural adult class, she spent several years studying her newfound love, through weekend workshops led by artisans considered rock stars in the felt-making field, and a lot of trial and error in creating and honing designs, selecting materials and mastering surface textures.

In 2016 she launched Fog & Fury. “I liked the symbolism of both words, and thought it spoke to a duality of calm and reflective with wild and forceful,” she said of the name. “Fog is obviously a weather feature specific to San Francisco that also works for my water-based process. And I once heard another maker say wool felting was described as ‘the angry fiber’ because it takes intense pressure and agitation to transform wool into felt fabric. I leaned into that fire-in-the belly meets the divine in choosing ‘fury.’”

Modern living room with a patterned brown sofa, beige armchair, wooden side table, unique table lamp, and decorative items
Sofa covered in Fog & Fury Steppe textile at the San Francisco showroom of De Sousa Hughes. Photo: Jose Manuel Alorda

Felting gave Colombano, who graduated from the San Francisco Art Institute with a double major in painting and photography, something that her earlier textile excursions in knitting and weaving never quite did. “I think one of the reasons why I like felt-making as a textile more than others is because it does relate back to my painting days where it is a blank canvas,” she says. “I can start anywhere, at any time, with any layer. I can go top down, I can start from the corner, I can start from the middle. It’s this incredible freedom.”

It is also incredibly laborious, a process that requires vision, muscle and a lot of patience. Her efforts were not for naught. A designer friend encouraged her to show her work to DeSousa Hughes, one of San Francisco’s top trade showrooms. Their response was an immediate and enthusiastic “yes.”

Person working with a large piece of fabric on a table in a workshop setting, surrounded by books and materials.
Fog & Fury founder Kristin Colombano constructing her Striation textile. Photo: Courtesy Fog & Fury
Modern bedroom with a neatly made bed, green and beige bedding, and a small table lamp on a side table.
Marbled Striation blanket in Olive Moss by Fog & Fury. Photo: Maren Caruso

Others followed, including Thomas Lavin in Los Angeles and Trammell-Gagné in Seattle. Since then, the likes of  Nicole Hollis, Jay Jeffers, Anne-Marie Barton, Kendall Wilkinson, and Geoffrey De Sousa have specified her designs, from throws and pillows to custom yardage for upholstery. But Colombano isn’t resting on her laurels. “It’s a real challenge to get people to learn about [felt], understand it, and want to use it or choose it,” she admits. “It is different. But it’s also so rare and unusual, and so spectacularly beautiful.”