Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Rubelli and Moroso


photo: Rubelli
Last year, the Musée des Tissus et des Arts décoratifs of Lyon, hosted the exhibit  Lo sguardo laterale /A sideways glance - Moroso and exploration in decorative arts and design. The event show-cased two creative Italian firms:  furniture maker, Moroso and weaver, Rubelli. 

photo: Rubelli
Very seductive in itself -
this 18th century Philippe de Lasalle textile document was chosen from the Lyon museum archives


photo: Rubelli

to be part the upholstery project.
 The element of fun in Rubelli's recreation of this design is in the ground of the fabric. Those graphic squares are a woven representation of the point paper used for the technical drawing that is usually seen only by the manufacturer. The design is brought into the 21st century with the discreet modernity and a sort of 'textilian' inside joke!


photo: Rubelli
chair design Patricia Urquiola
photo: Rubelli

The fabric was made on a warp of 9600 fine yarns of organzine silk woven with none less than 12 wefts - 11 of viscose  and 1 metallic yarn. The Italian weaver explains, "... 50/60 wefts per centimetre are normally used for a rich fabric, as many as 180 were used for this precious brocade."




3 comments:

  1. We have the Moroso stool in our library – ordered in New York in Italian wool and leather. I have not yet seen the Rubelli fabric but I shall look for it.

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  2. How lovely for a library for overflowing books and feet. I found the fabric referenced as "Madame du Barry" at Rubelli.

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  3. gorgeous! love the urquiola chair. nice contrast between form and pattern. as for the sriacha: ooh yes. my husband puts it on everything now. it is denser and smokier. you wouldn't be disappointed. we still put tabasco on our eggs tho!

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