Posts Tagged ‘custom upholstery’
Be Inspired with Fabricut: Signature Black
“Rich black is the backdrop for a trend toward dark, moody and enticing interiors. Central to this style is a strong black foundation which can be paired with neutrals or deep saturated color.”
Click to see more from Fabricut’s take on one of this season’s hottest trends. It’s an excellent way to bring drama to your bedding,  window treatments or furniture upholstery.
[ Original Content via Fabricut]
Leading Edge Trimmings
An unparalleled collection of exclusive trimmings, Stroheim’s Leading Edge Trimmings celebrates the evolution of the decorative border. Marked by statement wide widths, natural cotton and linen tapes, luscious embroidered and appliquéd details along with sumptuous velvet textures, these designs have been constructed using extensive handwork making each a true artisan creation.
Featured fabrics and trimmings:
Top image: Danbo – Dusty Lilac (top pillow) / Cloudprint – Gold Dust (top pillow tape); Tymsboro – Cameo (middle pillow) / Cloudprint – Desert (middle pillow tape); Sancerre – Pebble (bottom pillow) / Cloudprint – Storm (bottom pillow tape).
Bottom image: Shropshire – Cameo (drapery) / Cyprus Key – Natural (drapery trim); Rivoli – Cashmere (settee upholstery) / Interweave – Mink (settee trim); Timboon – Cameo (left pillow) / Stripe – Cashmere (left pillow cord); Vacherin Ombre – Cameo (right pillow) / Khalil – Travertine (right pillow tape).
| Original content and images via Fabricut |
Velvet Lounge
Once an opulent fabric reserved for royalty and the elite world, velvet is now used to layer interior spaces to achieve visual and textural luxury. A sumptuous fabric and a symbol of extravagance throughout time, the appeal of velvet has never faded.
Contemporary with sophistication and stylistic harmony, Fabricut’s Velvet Lounge collection features couture-quality jacquards and printed luxury velvets in a variety of modern colors. Sensuous lines and textures, combined with contrasting surfaces, create a dialog of light and shade, shiny and matte with abstract-sculptural effects.
Fabrics featured: Nirvana – Aubergine, Fortunate – Biscuit, Urbanscape – Beetle, New Vision – Imperial, Umbria – Burgundy, Nirvana – Mushroom, Fortunate – Lava and Profilic – Charcoal
| Original image and content via Fabricut |
Durability is the New Luxury
Crypton Home Fabrics
Our new Crypton Home Collection offers the ability to create enduring luxury.
Now, it is no longer necessary to wait until the kids grow up to create a beautiful living space.
Synonymous with durability, Crypton Home fabrics are resistant to both stains and odors. They are designed with breakthrough performance technology built into every fiber so it won’t wear away.
From lavish textures to small scale jacquards – all with a soft hand – Crypton Home Fabrics are the perfect durable, fabric solution for any and every active household.
| Original content via Duralee |
Kravet Launches Fifth Fabric Collection with Museum of New Mexico
Kravet is pleased to announce its fifth collaboration with Museum of New Mexico. For this fabric collection, the Museum tells the story of its unique place as a crossroads of international trade and culture through fabrics inspired by the Museum’s renowned textile, basketry and ceramic collections.
Inspiration for these modern interpretations of traditional designs was drawn primarily from small-scale patterns and embroideries in the 25,000-piece textile and dress collection at the Museum of International Folk Art. Iconic Native American textile and ceramic pieces from the Museum of Indian Arts & Culture also influenced many of the collection’s designs. These museums comprise two of the Museum of New Mexico’s four cultural institutions.
Color and texture inspirations came from diverse mediums such as pottery, basketry, textiles and cut paper patterns. The result is rich textures and pops of vivid colors that mimic the crisp blue sky, the red earth and an array of the complementary hues, both hot and cool, so often identified with the beautiful Santa Fe landscape.
Textile designer and Museum of International Folk Art donor Alexander Girard quoted an Italian proverb when asked why he collected the folk art of the world’s artisans: “Tutto il mondo e paes” or “the whole world is hometown.”
“In partnering with us and by choosing such a broad spectrum of Museum textiles for inspiration, Kravet too is saying, ‘The whole world is hometown’ and that there are no foreigners,” said Pamela Kelly, Vice President of Licensing and Brand Management for the Museum.
Santa Fe has been an international hub of culture and commerce for centuries, as well as a creative haven for artists, writers, collectors and others drawn to the region’s bohemian lifestyle, spacious landscapes and rich cultural traditions. This eclectic ensemble of textiles embodies this creative approach to living – collected, worldly and modern.
| Original images and content via Kravet |