Guest Blogger: DC By Design

Hello, I’m Jennifer from DC By Design. First, thank you Ally for asking me to do this guest post on your blog — what an honor. I’ve been thinking about favorite trends, and one that emerged for me a couple years ago and persists today started with this stunning foyer designed by my friend Tracy Morris:

www.fromtherightbank.com
tracymorrisdesign.com

I just couldn’t stop staring at that dramatic wing chair under the stairs — never mind that you don’t normally see a wing chair there, but the upholstery had me mesmerized. And you know when you see one thing that really catches your eye, you see it everywhere? Well.

www.fromtherightbank.com
Mothology.com

I started spotting this elegant stripe characteristic of old French grain sacks — you got it, everywhere.

www.fromtherightbank.com
Mothology.com

So much so, that I compiled a product page on the trend for Washington Spaces last year.

www.fromtherightbank.com
Wisteria.com

Big furniture companies such as Vanguard and C.R. Laine were getting into the act with reproductions of that stripe, as well as the more ornate patterns on those old sacks that bore family names and farms. Then I found Kymberly Fraser, who started her own company, 3 Fine Grains, that sells nothing but furniture and accessories made from authentic, antique sacks from France and Germany. I particularly love this throw:

www.fromtherightbank.com
3finegrains.com

And, well, that was about it for about a year. Fast forward to this summer, when I was hunting high and low for window treatments in my sons’ bedroom, and I come across my old friend again at Calico Corners. They called this “Primitive Stripe,” but I know where its inspiration lies.

www.fromtherightbank.com

And then, AGAIN, I start seeing this everywhere — I guess it took a couple years for the really big guns, from Ballard Designs to Restoration Hardware, to incorporate this trend into their lines. These images are from the most recent catalogues.

www.fromtherightbank.com
This bench from Pottery Barn bears a striking resemblance to the fabric on the Wisteria bench above, don't you think?

Anthropologie, as they do with everything, puts its own twist on the trend with the Lunet chair, which they say is upholstered with recycled jute sacks from France:

www.fromtherightbank.com

www.fromtherightbank.com

Anthro’s Ditte sofa in “Seaswept” also puts a fun twist on our lovely stripe.

www.fromtherightbank.com

Now, check out Restoration Hardware’s current offerings — all about industrial-inspired furnishings with metal accents and old-looking fabric, as we see here in this bedroom setting:

www.fromtherightbank.com

Resto’s throw pillows also channel the French sacks of old.

www.fromtherightbank.com

The French stripe in Ballard’s current collection is included in a general trend toward rougher upholstery fabric, in keeping with another trend toward old industrial-type furniture in formal settings.

www.fromtherightbank.com

Rough fabric. I’ll say. If French sacks aren’t rustic enough, some furniture makers are amping this trend up a notch with truck tarps. Yup, you read that right — old, beat-up, stained canvas truck tarps. If they can survive years of covering God-knows-what in trucks rumbling all over creation, then you know there’s absolutely nothing you can do to destroy them on your furniture.

Again, from Restoration Hardware:

www.fromtherightbank.com

I’ve also seen the tarps from to-the-trade companies at the market in High Point, NC — and it’s only a matter of time before you start seeing them in the major catalogues, I think:

www.fromtherightbank.com
This tarp-cushioned chaise by Bobo Intriguing Objects puts the chic back in "shabby chic."
www.fromtherightbank.com
Thomas Bina created a line of tarp-covered furniture -- patches, stains and all -- for Four Hands.
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A detail of Bina's chair. I would have no problem with my kids climbing all over this one!

Maybe this trend toward old fabric and old furniture (we’ve all seen the general leanings now away from mid-century-modern to industrial and “granny chic.”), is symbolic of us yearning for simpler times in such a complicated, technology-infused era.

Whatever it is, I’m loving the honesty of it — there’s nothing contrived in these fabrics, and they’ve certainly stood the test of time.

10 comments

  1. Tricia Rose

    Have you seen Ludwiga's Linens on Etsy and in high-end shops – she has exceptional monograms on old linens – and my own contribution, Rough Linen bedding, modelled on a homespun natural linen pillowcase made by my great grandmother: http://roughlinen.com There are a lot of us linen lovers out there!
    .-= Tricia Rose´s last post ..A New Amusement =-.

  2. Whitney

    You must be my design soulmate – I'm LOVING this material! I think it's such a nice combination of chic, girly, yet modern. It's nice and bright for a room and the texture is fantastic. I get so tired of the usual leather and microsuede looks – this is a terrific twist. Thank you so much for your guest post!

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