Skinner

Inspired by photography of dance, Skinner captures a moment in motion – like a ballerina caught mid-pirouette, a trail of chiffon billowing in the air. Its pattern ripples and fades, like sound waves. Smoke. Energy. Movement made tangible, woven into stillness – a tactile dance, frozen in time.
Tellen

Sinuous repetition yields dramatic – yet eminently versatile – interest as a line of silk snakes across a field of oxidized wool. The result? An ordered presentation of curves at once geometric and organic.
Keelan

Our founder’s love of antique carpets inspired Keelan’s Tibetan rug-like, spun silk, low pile simplicity. Velvety in the extreme, its touch recalls aged textiles, bygone fineries, and a luxurious moment in time – but in the most modern and graphic of ways. Marked by slender hand-carving to subtly define color-blocked transitions in hue – without repeat or restriction, for the utmost in flexibility.
Walker

A mélange of wool and silk and dual colors – one for pile and one for loop – are meticulously hand-carved to birth lights and darks that are so much more than the sum of their twin hues. Add to the mix a trio of sheared pile heights, ribbed loops, and consistency of repeat for unparalleled distinction that’s at once subtle and rich.
Quill

A flight of geometric fancy harkening to the bird’s eye pattern takes wing in utterly original form distinguished by wrapped and dashed stitchery.
Shibori

Suggestive of – indeed, informed by – 8th century Japanese fabric dyeing techniques, Shibori summons memories of ages-old manipulations, and marriages, between fiber and dye. Oxidized to evoke eternities; rendered wholly new by imagination.
Holborn

Its leather patches whip-stitched atop a field of silk, Holborn’s geometry is augmented by the play between negative and positive spaces – here, the opaque density of elongated leather hexagons; there, the textural counterpoint of flatwoven silk. All, accentuated by heavily corded hand-stitching.
Plie

Think of it as pleated textile art. Rippled. Water-like. With a rhythmic pattern that echoes the tides, dancing as a ballerina does, dipping and rising again and again.
Primitive

Zero pile. Oxidized. Textured. A modern-day, geometric reference to the ancient shape of the hexagon, deeply, deeply – so very deeply – saturated in tonal color.
Larabee

A patina so evocative, it seems to be born of the ages. A touch so extravagant, it could only come from pure silk. Saturated in color; zero pile; an ideal companion to antique rugs.