Cirque

Circular elements created of circular motifs unify its design. Indian wool is hand-blended to create incomparable depth and dimension
Passage

A brick-lined alley. A mosaic of crumbled asphalt. A windowless stretch, inviting the crossing of a threshold. Entry points all, from a place of compression to expansion, and finally, illumination. Where a profusion of richly saturated color, rendered in silk, pirouettes across a field of wool. Passage, indeed.
Fiume

Like rivulets coursing downstream – at first, meandering and indistinct; later, nearly uniformly assembling at the lapping river’s edge – Fiume captures dichotomies abundantly displayed in nature. Orderly without the constraints of perfected repetition, it is at once peaceful, dramatic, and of course, original.
Durango

Reminiscent of the natural world, Durango’s patterning recalls the bark of the sycamore tree. A towering presence with a lifespan of centuries and ubiquitous near the foothills of the Sierra Madre Oriental, it—like Durango—is adorned with organic, amorphous, and irregular shapes. Ebbing and flowing across tree trunks—and beautifully designed rooms, whether rising from woods, resting near waters, or reminding inhabitants of the wider world—it suffuses any space with a sense of the primitive. The essential. And the undeniably evocative.
Crossing

Orderly, yet varied. Parallel, yet perpendicular. Like the proverbial fork in the road, Tuareg-inspired Crossing presents an exhilarating choice: to view pattern as vertical—or horizontal. And like all versatile options, it layers even the most current of spaces with design rooted in history—easily traversing centuries, oceans, and contexts.
Bordure

Like African Tuaregs—nomadic tribal wanderers who first journeyed, centuries ago, across a continent to expand their influence—Bordure is enclosed by borders. Not of seas or mountains, but of woven leather and linen, in a welcome mélange of geometric simplicity and exuberant coloration. Limitless in its application, Bordure is both restrained and playful—and at ease almost anywhere your
own design journeys may lead.
Laris

A morning stroll through the rhythmically perfect arched colonnades surrounding Paris’s Place des Vosges yielded our inspiration for Laris. Just as structured and similarly ever-changing with light, Laris balances geometric precision with subtle color undulation, ensuring no two of its rows feel identical.
Luma

They say the best designs come from collaboration—like Luma, whose every staggered, alternating stripe feels like the liveliest of conversations. Here, colors trade places, shifting column by column, a rhythm both structured and free. Inspired by Bauhaus ideals, Luma displays a meeting of minds and hands—of Indian weavers, modern designers, worldly cultures and historic influences, all combining in the creation of handcrafts for living.
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.
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.