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Edward Bulmer Natural Paint has recently opened the doors to its first flagship store in London. The pioneering paint company have long been admired in the pages of the interiors glossies, on the walls of beautiful homes and of course you will have seen how we at Lorfords use their exquisite colours.
Edward and the team are delighted to now have a ‘home’ in the design hub on Pimlico Road. More than just a ‘paint shop’, not only can you browse their range of colours on a huge colour wheel, Edward Bulmer Natural Paint is championing sustainable interiors, hosting exhibitions with creatives and exclusive, curated events.
Unsurprisingly the showroom is a colourful display of the natural paints throughout. Edward chose to paint the façade in his favourite deep, rich orange ‘Malahide’, paying homage to the area’s history. This eye-catching deep orange exterior, brilliantly inspired by Orange Square, where the showroom is located on the corner of Ebury St and Pimlico Road.
“Bringing further colour to orange square, we look forward to providing help with all things colour and paint in the heart of London’s greatest design quarter.”
Orange tones, Edward says ‘are having a revival – with distinctly nostalgic notes, Malahide fuses modern with timeless so effortlessly.’
Deep, magnetic and exotic all rolled into one colour, it certainly stops people in their tracks as they walk by the showroom. @Farstud.o also uses our ‘Malahide’ with ‘Jonquil’ (pictured to the left), creating a tonal yet fresh and light palette, as a more peachy scheme.
If you are thinking about where or how to use ‘Malahide’ in your home, Edward suggests it to be a great spot ‘to cheer up a boot room or a dark passageway, especially with a two-tone scheme or dare we mention – a feature wall’. With Edward going on to say one special rule for this orange colour… ‘Don’t paint sparingly – if you use it, mean it. You won’t regret it.’
Malahide as featured in a Lorfords Antiques and Lorfords Contemporary photoshoot.
The Edward Bulmer Natural Paint showroom will also be hosting a series of exhibitions throughout the year where they will be sharing some of their favourite sustainable, like-minded brands. From art exhibitions and installations to curated collections, talks and exciting pop-up events; there is going to be something for everyone.
The brand aims to champion smaller sustainable brands and artists by providing a platform in the heart of London to help them tell and sell their stories. Current brands on show in the shop are Haines Collection and Hum London lamp shades and the plastic-free wall murals from Beautifully by George.
The Autumn line up at Edward Bulmer Natural Paint is not one to miss with events during London Design Festival 17th – 25th September, leading British landscape artist Pete Beckett, Edward’s own book launch ‘The Colourful Past: Edward Bulmer and the English Country House’ and a Christmas shopping pop-up with Sharland England and Louise Roe.
To celebrate the 20th anniversary of London Design Festival, Pimlico Road is very much on the map as one of the design districts for the week-long celebration of all things creative and design. Edward Bulmer Natural Paint will be hosting an immersive and quite extraordinary exhibition from some leading young artists using waste to make art, including waste paint!
The Crossover Project brings three creative industries together to collaboratively tackle waste in a bid for a circular economy. Harnessing waste from design and fashion brands, the project is connecting artists to this waste who will work with these unfamiliar materials, transforming them into bespoke artworks and diverting them from landfill.
Alongside the exhibition, there will be lampshade upcycling workshops with artist Jemima Sara and the founder of Haines Collection, Jules Haines. With a further talk at the showroom in the evening, where Edward Bulmer will host a talk with journalist and co-founder of The Crossover Project Roddy Clarke, Aurelia Isliyme and Jules Haines.
If you'd like to join Edward Bulmer Natural Paints for their workshops or talks then book via the links below - spaces limited!
Workshop – Thursday 22nd September 10-12pm
Workshop – Thursday 22nd September 2-4pm
Talk – Thursday 22nd September 6pm
Visit their website and sign up to their newsletter, follow them on Instagram, pop into their London showroom or give them an email or call!
Website: https://www.edwardbulmerpaint.co.uk/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/edwardbulmerpaint/
New London showroom: 194 Ebury St, London SW1W 8UP
Email: info@edwardbulmerpaint.co.uk
Call: 01544 388535
The Arts & Crafts movement touched every corner of the design world. From furniture to textiles to jewellery, designers adopted a holistic approach to manufacture. At the very heart of every surviving piece is the craftsman himself.
By the end of the 19th Century, the industrial revolution had utterly transformed Western society. Industries boomed as new technologies emerged, and handicrafts dwindled. Vast factories emerged to accommodate these changes, and productivity and efficiency were the new watchwords.
The industrial revolution brought many elements of our lives today into fruition. In lots of ways, this was a momentous step forwards. Society underwent a dramatic change and standards of living improved for many. However, it was not so for those on the frontline of machine-led production.
The underbelly of factory work was tedious, gruesome, and dangerous. Unskilled labour was in high demand because the process required scores of workers to perform repetitive tasks. Certainly, the skilled craftsman conceiving, designing, and producing a piece became mere nostalgia.
Fine art is that in which the hand, the head, and the heart of man go together.
For some thinkers, critics, and designers, these developments were unsettling. John Ruskin was a vocal art critic in the second half of the 19th Century. He claimed a link between poor design standards and poor social health in England. Ruskin suggested a return to handicraft: 'fine art is that in which the hand, the head, and the heart of man go together.' This idea that art serves a moral purpose would later become a fundamental principle of the Arts & Crafts movement.
Let's go back to 1851, the year of the highly anticipated Crystal Palace exhibition in London. This exhibition celebrated the finest corners of Victorian design and pieces from as far away as India. It was a majestic display of talent and wondrous furniture, but it also exposed the excesses of industrialisation. A nauseating range of revival styles was on display, and much of it was heavy-duty furniture that was rich with ornament. It was no coincidence, then, that the following years of the 1850s sowed the seeds for a different sort of revolution.
Excitement about machine-led production side-lined the decorative arts, and discontent mounted. The antidote to this artificial excess was a return to medievalism. The gothic was a popular Victorian revival style, and reformers hailed 16th Century methods. In his 1851 text, The Stones of Venice, John Ruskin praises gothic architecture and saw its roughness as evidence of the craftsman’s personality and freedom.
Pugin was another gothic advocate, and he believed in the importance of a piece's construction. He was in favour of exposing joints and other methods in the manner of a Medieval carpenter. This school of thought found its voice in the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, formed in 1848.
Among the group's members were Dante Gabriel Rossetti, William Morris, and Ford Madox Brown. The Pre-Raphaelites opposed the High Renaissance, which they saw as frivolous and insincere. Instead, they sought moral seriousness and integrity, and this group was in many ways a precursor to the Arts & Crafts movement.
Madox Brown was one of the first to transfer the group’s shared ideals about design into furniture. He shared Pugin’s vision of flat surfaces and linear profiles that had more in common with Medieval carpentry than refined 18th Century cabinet-making.
Arts & Crafts societies sprung up to centralise this growing group of individuals. The biggest of these, the Arts & Crafts Exhibition Society, was formed in 1888. This society held regular shows up to and beyond its 50th anniversary in 1938. They gave the decorative arts a stage and spread the beauty of Arts & Crafts. In 1960, the society merged with the Cambridgeshire Guild of Craftsmen to form the Society of Designer Craftsmen which is still active today.
There was a strong sense of community amongst these different organisations. 'The best tastes are to be found in those manufacturers and fabrics wherein handicraft is entirely or partially the means of producing the ornament.' These words of Richard Redgrave, a prominent reformer at the London School of Design, describe their shared sentiment. Significantly, many of the early members of this movement were architects. This meant that they held a shared interest in the gesamtkunstwerk- the 'total work of art.' For example, Charles Voysey was foremost an architect and then a major contributor to Arts & Crafts furniture and textiles.
Exhibitions put Arts & Crafts on display for all to see and escalated the movement. Journals such as The Studio helped to spread the word internationally. America's own movement was well underway, but with a slightly different approach. Unlike UK reformers, US practitioners were indifferent to the machine. They saw it merely as another tool at the craftsman’s disposal and necessary for commercial success. Under Gustav Stickley the American 'mission style' emerged. The mission style used sturdy oak and promoted democratic values, but Stickley was more than happy to use machinery to produce the furniture.
Have nothing in your houses that you do not know to be useful or believe to be beautiful.
Although he was already a prolific designer, William Morris only became fully involved with Arts & Crafts later on. Nonetheless, his influence was monumental and he played a central role at the beginning of the Arts & Crafts heyday in the 1880s. His focus was on a return to small-scale workshops, whereby the craftsmen involved could oversee the design process from beginning to end. The Medieval Guilds inspired Morris and offered a model for the personalised craftsmanship that he craved.
As an upper-class man himself, the impact of the factory system on the working classes shocked Morris. He drew on Ruskin’s teachings and shared his nostalgia for a pre-industrial world. Morris loved nature, and flora and fauna are front and centre of the 50+ wallpaper designs he produced over his career. The designer realised that to live in his perfect home, he would have to design every aspect of it himself. His famous Red House embodies his trademark quote: ‘Have nothing in your houses that you do not know to be useful or believe to be beautiful.’
Designers wanted to create furniture that was useful to ordinary people and free from fussy decoration. Nonetheless, this movement was about reviving the decorative arts and aesthetics were still important. But crucially, designers did away with the ‘artificial’ ornamentation that had been front and centre of the Great Exhibition.
The Arts & Crafts umbrella was wide-ranging, but the majority of designs are united by a few simple features. Tables, chairs, and cupboards would have rectilinear shape and rely on simple vertical forms. The construction was a return to basics and most joints exhibit mortise-and-tenon or dovetail joinery. Arts & Crafts practitioners were unconcerned with hiding hinges or other aspects of a piece's mechanism. The movement proved that practical and aesthetic elements could happily coexist in design.
Craftsmen preferred darker woods, such as stained oak. They would use the wood itself as an aesthetic factor, with the grain, flecks, and rays often on display. It was not always solid wood, and some craftsmen took a more decorative approach than others. Some pieces might exhibit veneers and intricate carvings, but these elements never sacrifice the piece's utilitarian value.
The ‘through tenon’ provided another decorative touch, whereby the tenon extends through the mortised piece and projects out of the other side. Craftsmanship itself is visible in the end product of an Arts & Crafts piece, in a way that had formerly been lost to the machine. ‘Truth to materials’ was the mantra, and the results had a sense of integrity.
Upholstery would involve leather or simple cloth, in order to keep the overall look as plain as possible. Hand-sanding and pigment-staining gave pieces of furniture the best possible finish. Hand-rubbing exposed the different layers in the wood and began a piece's journey to having a wonderful patina.
In the cities, Arts & Crafts gathered momentum through exhibitions and print promotions. Soon, the philosophy turned into commercial success. Designers forged good working relationships with manufacturers who could sell their wares. William Morris set up Morris & Co in 1875. The major Oxford Street store stocked other designers too, and they also sold through Liberty and Heals. Suddenly, the Arts & Crafts movement was reaching a much wider audience and it moved into the mainstream. It was the dominant design force in Britain up until the 1910s, and its influence spread across Europe, America, and Japan.
At the turn of the 20th Century, Arts & Crafts migrated out of the city and into the countryside. Lots of the designers celebrated simple rural ideals and the rolling hills naturally held great allure. Workshops sprung up across Britain, and many designers settled in the Cotswolds. These workshops became their own schools of sorts and each had its own take on design.
Sturdy structure, compelling patina, and timeless aesthetic appeal. These are just some of the qualities offered by Arts & Crafts designers. From cupboards to metalwork, every piece has the social history of this movement behind it. We are privileged to have the Arts & Crafts legacy around us in the Cotswolds. Our dealers are always sourcing Arts & Crafts gems so that we have wonderful pieces in stock. Our collection includes big names and makers, from iconic Heal's pieces to Gordon Russell's fantastic works. Visit our lookbook, 'Truth to Materials,' to explore a sample.