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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.”

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Autumnal Palettes – Embrace Orange Tones

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.

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Exhibitions at Edward Bulmer Natural Paint

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.

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Edward Bulmer Natural Paint at London Design Festival

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

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/lampshade-workshop-with-jemima-sara-and-jules-haines-tickets-411177762757

Workshop – Thursday 22nd September 2-4pm

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/lampshade-workshop-with-jemima-sara-and-jules-haines-tickets-414736667537

Talk – Thursday 22nd September 6pm

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/join-leading-creatives-in-tackling-waste-in-the-design-industry-tickets-415196031507


Stay connected with Edward Bulmer Natural Paints

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

We talk to ‘Antiques Roadshow’ expert Chris Yeo about collecting Mid-Century glass. He says ‘dancing with light and alive with colour, Mid-Century glass makes a bold statement, just try not to get too hooked’.

Glass Act

When I tell people I work in antiques the question I’m invariably asked (after “When do you hope to get a real job?”) is “What do you collect?” and my answer is absolutely nothing. Although I’ve lived, eaten and breathed antiques since childhood the idea of amassing a collection of any one thing or group of things has never held any appeal. With one exception, that is. 

Roughly twenty years ago, on a typical Saturday morning mooch around an antiques market (remember them?), I came across something that stopped me in my tracks. It was a glass vase, a sleek, weighty number in rich shades of blue and turquoise. It was love at first sight and, of course, I bought it. About a month later I bought another piece of glass, shortly followed by another and another – you get the picture. 

For the next few years, I hoovered up every piece of studio glass I could find. It was a labour of love and an obsession which bordered on an addiction. Put a piece of studio glass in front of me and I would find it near impossible to ‘just say no’. I won’t be too hard on my younger self.  There is, after all, something undeniably seductive about mid-century art glass: a perfect marriage of art, craft and design that melts the hearts of even the most ardent minimalists. Richly coloured and beautifully made, fine quality glass introduces just the right note of luxury, colour and sophistication into any interior.

The history of colourful glass

The Europe that emerged from the Second World War was a grey and dismal place. War-time shortages and rationing of “luxury goods” meant that people had been starved of colour for years. There was a huge demand for anything bright, fresh and modern, especially among young people setting up home for the first time.  Ceramics, textiles and wallpaper manufacturers all ramped up the colour quota but nowhere was this appetite for colour better nourished than amongst makers of studio glass. And, when it came to glass, no one understood colour better than the Italians.

Italian design came of age in the post-war years with a welter of colourful designs in both glass and plastic, materials which share the same malleable qualities. The magical process of transforming a bubble of molten glass into a vessel or piece of sculpture is a test of skill and artistry but the Italians took up the challenge with gusto and, of course, style. Highly individualistic designers celebrated colour for its own sake, applying it in ever more bold and dramatic combinations. Italian glass is more properly Venetian glass. Venice has always been the heart of the Italian glassmaking industry with a history of glass-blowing unparalleled anywhere else in the world. From the thirteenth century onwards Venice had held a monopoly on glassmaking in Europe, and its products—often extravagantly coloured, enamelled, and gilded—were treasured luxuries. Originally, Venetian glass was made - as you would imagine - in Venice, but the workshops were moved to the small lagoon island of Murano in 1291, in part because their kilns constituted a fire hazard to the city, but also to keep the glassmaking process a secret by isolating the makers on their own well-guarded island.

Now, I think it’s fair to say that for many of us our idea of Murano glass will have been “coloured” by a trip to Venice. You’ll have done the circuit of St Marks, paid through the nose for a coffee and then, along with ten thousand others, you will have been funnelled off into the narrow alleyways that lead off the square. You shuffle along passed shop after shop – each one dedicated to relieving you of as much money as possible - crammed with all manner of gaudy clowns, fish, dolphins and more Mickey Mouse figures than even Disneyland would want - all sold under the banner “Murano”. If this has been your only encounter with Italian glass you’d be forgiven for wanting it to stay that way but there really is so much more to Murano.

Examples of Murano glass

Murano Glass

From the 13th to the 18th century Murano glass was one of the wonders of the world with an unrivalled reputation for innovation, its glassmakers having developed, among other things, ways of incorporating threads of gold into their creations and techniques for the famous millefiori (multicoloured) and lattimo (milk) glass.  Amongst the myriad workshops that make up the Murano glass industry the most highly regarded and arguably the best known is Venini

The firm was founded in the early 1920s when an enterprising Milanese lawyer, Paolo Venini, established a new glass company on the island with a Venetian antiques dealer, Giacomo Cappelin.  Their breakthrough innovation was to copy the French fashion industry’s tradition of appointing an artistic director to create new designs and then drive them forwards. This was a stroke of genius which instantly put Venini at the forefront of fashion.  The firm collaborated with artists who transferred their skills from canvas to glass, combining bright vibrant colour with flair and confidence that’s the very essence of Italian style. As a strategy, it took glassmaking to new heights of excellence and kick-started the Italian studio glass movement. 

By the early 1930s, Venini was attracting the cream of Italian designers including Carlo Scarpa, Gio Ponti and Tyra Lundgren. The post-war years were Murano’s most dazzling and creative period. With its bold palette, Italian glass of the 1950s and ‘60s is instantly recognisable. Shapes have an easy asymmetry and a looseness of form reminiscent of folded fabric. In fact, one of the most popular shapes was the ‘fazaletto’ or ‘folded-handkerchief’ vases first made by Venini in the 1940s.

'Folded-handkerchief' by Venini

Glass around the world

With its vibrant colour combinations and top-quality design credentials, the Italians dominated the glass scene but they weren’t the only nation on the colour spectrum. In the UK the prestigious London-based firm of Whitefriars had been making glass since the 17th century and had a centuries-old reputation for restrained and elegant glassware but in the 1950s its fortunes changed when, like Venini, it engaged the services of an artistic director, Geoffrey Baxter (1912-95). 

Baxter was a young graduate fresh from the Royal College of Art, at that time a powerhouse of ideas about art and design. At Whitefriars, Baxter took the forms of Scandinavian glass – thickly-walled, with curving organic shapes and highly sculptural vessels – but, unlike the Nordic versions which used either clear glass or subtle, muted shades – Baxter used bright, rich colours to create something youthful and very British. Colourful things were also coming from behind the Iron Curtain. 

In Czechoslovakia, the glass industry was nationalised in 1948 and continued the centuries-old tradition of glassmaking in the Bohemian region. Bohemian glass had a reputation for excellence and the new Communist government did not deem glass to be an art form that was ideologically threatening, meaning that designers could work largely free of official control. This resulted in the creation of highly innovative modern designs that updated traditional methods of glassmaking and put Czech glass on par with the best that Italy had to offer.

Glass art by Whitefriars

Glass in the modern-day

Following on from its 1950s heyday,  studio glass is once again riding the crest of a wave of popularity. If you’ve never thought of having glass on display, think again: the allure of light playing on coloured glass can be just as compelling as a strikingly painted canvas. That said, some people remain a little nervous about living with glass – “It’ll get knocked over and smashed!” Truth is, most glass is more robust than you think and, so long as you’re not flinging it against the wall, it’s no less durable than pottery.  

Striking forms and colours make the piece a work of art in its own right and a real talking point. Art glass, displayed as a single statement piece or grouped together, brings warmth and colour to an interior as effectively as any painting and can also be a good way of introducing an accent colour into a room scheme. 

The sinuous, organic shapes and jewel-like hues so beloved of mid-century glass artists work as a counterpoint to the tailored interiors of today. Arranging collections of glass in groupings of similar colours and shapes create a strong visual impact. 

Remember, when it comes to glass, less is always more, don’t clutter shelves and tabletops with pieces. Instead, give each one space to breathe. You’ll find your art glass a source of inspiration as well as beauty.

Browse our collection of Mid-Century glass:

> Shop our Murano glass collection

> Shop glass and ceramics

 

Sunday 5 June 2022, World Environment Day, is the biggest international awareness day for the environment. It is led by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and held annually since 1974. The event has grown to be the largest global platform for environmental outreach, with millions of people from across the world engaging to protect the planet.

Protecting the environment and understanding our short roles as trustees of the natural world is important to us here at Lorfords. We are on our own journey to become as eco-friendly and sustainable as possible. Antiques, by their very nature, are reusable and eco-friendly. They are pre-loved items, regularly passed from generation to generation and often made from natural materials.

We work closely with like-minded brands, with a mission to create products that are for both people and planet. And none more so than our friends at Edward Bulmer Natural Paint who create beautiful paints backed up by ecological principles.

Edward Bulmer, founder of Edward Bulmer Natural Paint, has put 30 years’ experience into creating his paint brand. He is a self-confessed ‘eco-worrier’ (yes, worrier) with a drive to create paints that drastically reduce plastic pollution, carbon emissions and poor air quality. His mission is to change the paint industry with a solution for regenerative manufacturing based on ecology. The protection of nature’s biodiversity is at the core of all their product development.

As it is World Environment Day this week, we asked Edward and his team to take over our blog and tell us all about the natural paint world. We wanted to know what we should be looking out for and how we can help make our homes as sustainable as possible. So, over to them!

Edward Bulmer Natural Paint

Edward Bulmer | L-Shaped | Lorfords Antiques

Eco-friendly paint?

When choosing paint, it’s becoming evident that the contents might not always be exactly what it says on the tin! Many claim to be ‘eco-friendly’ or contain low levels of VOC’s (Volatile Organic Compounds) but when you look further, there is more to it than meets the eye.

Greenwashing is a big issue in the design and paint industry and at this present time it’s so important to get the facts right. We have noticed a rise in the practice of greenwashing which is extremely misleading for consumers. Like whitewashing, it is a device used to deflect ‘heat’, in this case to give the impression that something embodies an intent to be ecologically or environmentally responsible – the term many use is ‘eco-friendly.

Basically, paint is called eco-friendly when it is water-based, despite almost all paints containing resin binders that are forms of acrylic, vinyl or alkyd – all polymers that are derived from petro-chemicals. Also, all paint is water based, that is how paint is made! So, while the world’s governments now accept that using fossil fuels, fossil sources and petro-chemicals must be reduced to be eco-friendly and address the climate emergency, the paint and coatings industry is not keeping up.

We have always strived to give our customers as much information as possible for them to make an informed decision. We are the only paint brand on the market that uses plant-based binders. The alternative is a polymer derived binder, which is full of micro-plastics and other nasties. We use our plant-based binder to bring all our natural ingredients together and then inject this base white paint with a combination of our mineral and earth pigments.

 

Antiques

Using antiques in your home is the ultimate upcycling and celebrates vintage pieces that are unique and beautiful. Antiques are often made from natural materials which then change and evolve over time. Edward often thinks about antiques and paint in the same view. For example if you think about a wonderful piece of antique furniture, most people will enquire about how it should be looked after. If you have bought a lovely old house, isn’t it the same thing? Therefore, using natural and carefully created paints should be an easy decision!

To find out more, please read our interview with Edward Bulmer here.

Sign up to the Edward Bulmer Natural Paint newsletter to get 10% off your first paint order.

 Visit: www.edwardbulmerpaint.co.uk

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Meet us at our NEW Showroom: 194 Ebury Street, London, SW1W 8UP

In conversation with: Edward Bulmer 

Eco-worrier, interior designer and founder of his eponymous natural paint brand 

For 30 years, Edward Bulmer has worked in some of Britain’s finest buildings. As a leading interior designer, architectural historian and ‘colour expert’, he is renowned for restoring heritage buildings, and bringing his design ingenuity to the creation of modern living spaces surrounded by character. 

Bulmer is an expert in conservation too. And it is this that motivates him. His years of interior and architectural experience have resulted in his creation of Edward Bulmer Paints, a natural paints brand that cares for the environment. 

We joined Edward to talk about colour, his experience and passions. It has been a delight to gain insight into one of the most interesting interior design minds in the country.  

 

You are first and foremost an interior designer. How do you feel that this experience set you up for adding paint-maker to your list of accomplishments?

“Really because first and foremost I am an eco-worrier. It pains me that interior design is so wasteful and disregarding of its impact on people and the planet.  

I used to do my eco-worrying through charitable activity but realised that if I directed my energies to something I knew about from long experience, that I could make more difference. Modern paints are petro-chemical preparations. Our paints are plant-based preparations. Replace the former with the latter and you can have a major reduction in plastic pollution, carbon emissions and poor air quality.” 

 

You mostly focus on historic home and heritage restoration projects. What fascinates you most about these buildings?

“All of life is there! They encapsulate the human endeavor of generations of occupants, craftsmen and designers. They are endlessly adaptable and repairable, so like antiques they are sustainable provided the associated energy use to maintain them is kept in check.” 

Image by Lorfords Antiques

When you walk into a room, do you immediately understand what colours will work in that room, or is it a process that takes time and patience?

“On the whole, yes. I divide rooms between those of passage and those of dwelling. The former (halls, corridors, stairs, etc) were painted simply with ‘common’ colours in the past and I believe our default ‘evolutionary aesthetic’ is based on this – warm whites, greys, stones and pale pinks derived from earth pigments.  

Rooms for dwelling would be treated more richly and fashionably with mineral pigments used to obtain stronger colours and wallpapers and fabrics introducing deeper hues. 

Fundamentally though, colour is a preference but the tonality of the chosen colour is key and that is the service that I give and now our paint range provides.” 

 

You work on stunning renovations of houses full of natural character. How do you recommend adding character to younger buildings – to a mid-century house in the country for example?  

“Colour is the obvious answer – but it need not be wall colour – it can be on joinery or on pieces you acquire. Often the patina of an old painted or polished surface of an antique can punch above its weight in bringing your room a sense of calm and historic resonance.” 

 

How challenging is it to design a modern / contemporary feel whilst retaining or adding character too?

“Anything is a challenge if you are trying too hard! Don’t be too self-conscious. Use and buy what you like, but if you are combining pieces look for a tonal unity and try to ensure a similar level of design quality and integrity.” 

 

Do you have any favourite antiques pieces that you have placed recently?  

“The last things I bought from Lorfords give me pleasure every day because I used them here at home rather than on a client project.  

The first was a Louis XVI style writing table (see image below) with very chic geometrical marquetry and the second was a pair of large fluted Doric columns which now dress the frontispiece on the west façade of the house!” 

Edward Bulmer Paints | Lorfords antiques | L-Shaped

Image by Paul Whitbread

Do you think that handcrafted British furniture is the future of interior design in this country? 

“I sure hope so – whether new or old. For my work I have always sought to use native timber, traditional construction and the minimum of sheet material. But it is hard for cabinet makers to compete against producers who don’t do this because they can ‘outsource’ the polluting and exploitative effects of waste, poor labour conditions and manmade materials to offer us ‘cheap’ prices. 

We are all culpable here! Recycling, repurposing, upcycling, antique collecting, bespoke commissioning would be the stuff of a bright future for interior design.” 

 

You have spent years perfecting your very own plant-based paint. How did you feel when you were finally able to launch your paints onto the market?

“I started by using the paints on client projects with my own skilled painters. Gradually we launched to the wider market and realised that modern plastic paints had made builders and painters lazy with expectations of paint that were being met with a cocktail of petro-chemicals.  

So we worked with our manufacturers to develop paints that could outperform modern paints but only require plant derivatives for their formulation. We have played a long game and that has worked in our favour as the market has professed ‘green’ credentials for longer than customers have really cared.  

Now the worm is turning and the value of natural paint is being recognised as an easy win in reducing the carbon footprint and pollution impact of building projects. This month we open our first shop, though we continue to sell and supply our paints online, it will be great to have a place where customers and designers can come and see for themselves the revolution that is going on in house paint.” 

 

Your paint is made from natural raw materials that are responsibly sourced and you have made your manufacturing process as eco-friendly as it can possibly be. Your passion for protecting our environment is a wonderful thing. What top three tips can you share for those of us who would like to create a more sustainable interior without breaking the bank?

  1. Do it once and do it well. 
  2. Ask your supplier to take responsibility for their packaging. 
  3. Always ask for the ingredients/materials used in what you are buying and ensure the principle of repairability that antiques have.

If you can pick a favourite colour out of your collection, which would it be and why?

“Aquatic is a great example of a colour that has weight and drama. It hovers between blue and green, providing a great backdrop for all sorts of pieces.” 

  Aquatic | Edward Bulmer | L-Shaped | Lorfords

Image by Lorfords Antiques

Where do you take your inspiration from?  

“The long history of paint making. With the exception of the last 100 years, we have used natural materials for 40,000 years. The basic 12 earth and mineral pigments we use have been known about for millennia. They are as useful today as they have always been and my work as an interior designer leads me to concentrate on colours that I believe work as part of successful productions, rather than seeking to be the main event.” 

  

What are your predictions for the future colour mixes over the next 12-24 months?

“As you will gather I believe that what goes around comes around. I do think that good mid to deep tonal browns may have a resurgence. They can create atmosphere, straddle the urban/rural divide and flatter your furnishings.” 

  

Do you have any tips for bringing light into a room and at the same time, attempting to create an opulent feel?

Insert a Venetian window! Like this one at Lorfords for instance, or any ornamental reclaimed window. 

   Edward Bulmer cow parsley | L-Shaped | Lorfords

 

Join Edward Bulmer on his Create Academy course

Edward Bulmer has teamed up with lifestyle learning platform Create Academy to launch a course on colour, teaching you how to achieve harmony and cohesion throughout any interior scheme. We have secured L-Shaped readers with 15% off the course ‘A guide to pigments, paints and palettes’ at createacademy.com. Use code ‘LORFORDS15’ when booking.

Leading image: credit Andrew Crowley

EDWARD BULMER NATURAL PAINT

Edward Bulmer has poured over 30 years of experience into every tin, creating beautiful colours backed up by ecological principles. 

The plant-based recipes offer more than just a colour choice; the paints are highly breathable, healthy with no harmful VOCs or microplastics. 

Historically resonant yet robust for modern living, these pigment rich paints give outstanding coverage. They are easy to apply and create an unrivalled finish. 

Beautifully, breathable colours are backed up by ecological principles which are kind to both people and planet. 

All the paints are freshly mixed to order and delivered directly to your door. New flagship store open from 9th May at 194, Ebury St, SW1W 8UP 

 

We are excited to present ‘Through The Looking Glass’, a collection of paintings by London based artist Coco Morris. The exhibition opens on 3 May and runs through 1 June at Lorfords.

(Image by Adele Watts)

Morris pulls from a variety of painting languages and mixes them with her own personal landscape. This produces bold, captivatingly playful and sensory paintings that explore colour-form relationships.

Opposing narratives come together and inhabit her works; abstraction and figuration, intention and chance, the reductive nature of minimalist discourse and the all-immersive traces of abstract expressionists sit side by side. Her art plays on the tensions and boundaries that exist between these genres.

Colours clash and varying opacities layer enough to agitate the canvas surface and tempt you, the viewer, to look into the painting and construct your own associations.

The exhibition brings together a focused selection of paintings made over the last two years in which Morris has deconstructed painting and pushed the limits to explore how little needs to be in a painting for it to feel finished.

Coco graduated with a Fine Art degree from City and Guilds of London Art School in 2019. Two years prior, she was awarded the Painter-Stainers Scholarship and then the Chadwyck-Healey Prize for Painting in 2019. We visited Coco at her studio in South London and discussed her love of art, what drives her creativity and how she feels about her work.

We are so excited about your exhibition starting in May. Your work tends to blur genres, with each painting having its own personality. What ideas do you explore in your work?

Thank you! I explore colour-form relationships and the tensions and boundaries that exist between different painting languages and genres. This means that the subject matter, style of painting, materiality, point of inspiration and the process can be quite different between each painting.

Coco Morris exhibition at Lorfords Tetbury

Image by Kim Booker

Can you share an insight into your artistic process?

Well, I tend to plan out the larger paintings, [like those you will see in this show]. The composition comes from observational drawings that I obsessively redraw until the composition is reduced and abstracted. Sometimes the colours are based off other paintings or colour swatches I have collected. I begin the painting with washy layers of very bright, electric colour so the paintings have a backlit, glowing quality to them. Then I block in colour using uniform, repetitive marks and continue layering on different shades of a colour until the painting ‘clicks’ into place and feels finished.

I use my smaller works to trial new materials, colours, compositions, mark making and texture. I’ve found a certain freedom in making small works that has resulted in making a different series from my usual abstract paintings. I go in with no plans or expectations, I just put some marks, texture or colour on the surface and react to it, they are purely abstract and tend to be quite layered.

Abstraction and non-representational have opposing conceptions yet you are using both…

I allow for both, as I find that they feed into each other. I try not to put limitations on how I make paintings. When I commit to making a series I’m a bit more disciplined in what I allow to happen but I think there's room for both abstracted and the purely abstract within my work.

You have a strong relationship with colour. What moves you about how the colours interact on the surface?

Sometimes my colours are based on things like lipsticks, velvet and other fabrics. I want to recreate the colour but also the tactile sensations of the items. Or I might be trying to create a sense of light or temperature through the colour. I’m trying to create a sensation as much as a colour. I like how consuming colour is, and how it can change the way a room feels. And how tactile and physical colours can seem - certain colours look edible or velvety or matte. They can create illusions of depth and space. For me, framing the way I think about and make paintings, through the idea of colour, creates an endless amount of inspiration for painting.

The works in this show were made in the past two years. The titles feel much more emotionally charged than your earlier work (such as Magenta Haze in 2019) – why is this?

My earlier work was all planned out, I abstracted the forms from drawings, I had a vague idea of the colours I was aiming for and the types of marks/textures I would be using. Titling these paintings in a more process-based way that referenced the colours, forms and visuals seemed to make sense. In my more recent work, there's more pure abstraction. It all comes from me, the process feels more intimate. Titling them in a more emotive way compliments the process. I also think people find it easier to connect to abstract painting when the titles give a sort of emotional springboard into understanding or connecting with them.

Are there references that you consistently return to?

I have a lot of abstract motifs that reoccur in my work, like the frame/border and certain combinations of shapes. These come from abstracted drawings I made years ago. There are a couple of Rose Hilton paintings that I always seem to circle back to - ‘Blue Cafe, 2007' and ‘The Red Room, Woman Sleeping, 2010’. The soft edges, abstracted spaces and painting choices all balance figuration/abstraction and colour/form relationships so well.

If you could spend a day in the studio with any artist, past or present, who would it be?

I think my answer to this would change every month depending on what I'm doing in the studio. At the moment I'm thinking quite a lot about John Hoyland's paintings, so it would probably be him.

Which artists are you greatly influenced by?

I really love Bonnard and Vuillard. I constantly return to their paintings.  Also Rose Hilton, Patrick Heron, Mark Rothko. And figurative artists like Michael Armitage and Antonia Showering.

Describe your interior studio space for us. Is there a piece of furniture or object in your studio that you love, that you feel particularly attached to?

My studio is messy! There are paintings in progress everywhere - on the floor, walls, the table, stacked up in corners and on shelves. I work on the walls, table and floor so they’re all covered in smudges of different colours of paint. Any furniture I have in the studio will at some point turn into a painting pallet. Lots of very used looking paintbrushes - the bristles have been completely worn down, cut up or matted. They each create their own type of mark. There is one clean wall where I stack all the larger finished work and a glass wall which looks out onto the larger communal area inside my studio building.

I have a special attachment to three paintbrushes in my studio, that were used to paint my degree show. The bristles were completely worn away through the process of making those paintings but I've never thrown them away.

What do you do first thing in the morning to get your day going?

I have tea every morning with Kim Booker, another artist in the same studio building as me. We generally talk about painting, what we’re working on, and look at art books and references. It's a nice way to get into the mood for painting.

As an artist, what actions do you take to try to minimise your impact on the environment?

I’m always trying to be more sustainable in my practice. I’m a typical artist so I hoard everything. For the most part, it all gets reused, repurposed, or recycled. I buy paint colours in larger quantities to minimise packaging and also use Sennelier Abstract paint - it uses very lightweight packaging. I re-stretch canvases a lot, so I don't tend to buy many canvas frames. On most days, I do other small things like walk to and from the studio, take in a homemade (plastic-free) lunch and keep the radiators off. Generally, the paint itself isn’t very environmentally friendly so I'm always trying to find more ways to be eco-conscious.

You can visit 'Through The Looking Glass' at Lorfords, 30 Long Street, Tetbury from Tuesday 3 May through Wednesday 1 June.

Laura Muthesius and Nora Eisermann of Design Tales are inspired by nature. The Berlin duo shares their home and gives you their five top tips to create your very own Scandinavian interior.

Laura and Nora's five top tips

  • Use natural materials like wood, linen, stone and marble instead of plastic and polyester. We love the use of linen curtains, bed linens, wool and linen pillows or sofa covers, wooden furniture and of course, marble side tables!
  • Mix different materials in a way that create a vivid tension between different furniture items.
  • Use a natural colour palette. Using natural paint such as chalk paint gives a calm but lively look and atmosphere which helps to create a relaxing environment but highlights the architecture.
  • Respect the original details of your home, in fact, don't just respect them, save and highlight them! Not everything has to be perfectly new, it adds more charm and character if it's not.
  • Cherish the craftsmanship. Quality over quantity, invest in handmade, good quality pieces instead of going with every trend. Scandinavian designs are often classics making them timeless and a great investment!

About Design Tales

With homes in Skåne and Berlin, Laura and Nora love to travel! Nora studied fashion design but is now working as a (food-)stylist, and Laura studied photography and currently working as a photographer. The duo shares their passion for food, good design and interiors over on their website and on their Instagram.

Inside the home of Design Tales

There is no denying that antiques elevate our interiors in more ways than one. They connect us to the past and create unique spaces full of character. The often forgotten but equally important point is just how sustainable antiques are.

The fast furniture crisis

We spend a lot of time showing off our beautiful antiques here at Lorfords and too little time sharing how good for the planet they are. This may seem like an obvious statement, as antiques are in essence sustainable. And yet, in an age of climate consciousness around food, clothes and single-use plastic, the fast furniture crisis is on the backburner.

This doesn’t mean the crisis is not there, nor that it hasn't been exposed. A study commissioned by Antiques are Green found that a new piece of furniture lasts for an average of 15 years. Meanwhile, an antique piece of furniture is resold once every 30 years. This study concludes that the environmental impact of an antique piece is six times less than that of a new piece of furniture. Stark statistics indeed.

What is fuelling this crisis? Throwaway culture has become the norm. In 2019, the North London Waste Authority found that 22 million pieces of furniture are binned in the UK each year, with much of that going straight to landfill. Super low prices and the flatpack revolution have simply made it too easy for us. We’re on a conveyor belt of buying a piece of furniture, getting bored of it or it breaks, throwing it away and then buying another to replace it.

Conscious interior design

It’s not all bad though. A younger generation, the same age group we have labelled the ‘flatpack generation’ in years past, are waking up when it comes to their interiors. This is partly because they want to live an eco-friendly life and understand that fast furniture has a big impact on their carbon footprint.

But it is also because they are seeking soulful interiors – and the same can increasingly be said for all of us. The fast furniture culture resulted from modern living demands, the rent revolution and constantly changing fashions. The result was minimalist, functional… uniform.

The theory that such interiors aid our busy lives started to show cracks in lockdown. The Marie Kondo approach felt stark when our homes acted as a permanent base and refuge. This generation is seeking interiors with personality, character and soul. They want novel furniture and decorative pieces that provide a talking point. Our interiors are a reflection of us, so looking the same as everyone else isn’t cutting it anymore.

Why are antiques sustainable?

Antiques create more sustainable interiors - that's a fact. But why, exactly?

By definition

Antiques are one of the most forgotten forms of recycling, and yet one of the most obvious. To classify as an antique proper, an object must have survived for over 100 years. This is no mean feat and often a credit to the original craftsmanship. We already mentioned the statistic that antiques are resold every 30 years on average. They were crafted to last and be passed down through generations and that trend continues today.

Through materials and craft

Before the industrial revolution, cabinet-makers did everything by hand with a limited range of tools and techniques to hand. There was no MDF, nor any laminated chipboard.

Makers had to be invested in their product; if a piece fell apart after a few weeks, they would be the talk of their community – and not in a good way. There was a personal responsibility for good craftsmanship, a sense of ownership. It can feel like eco-consciousness is a relatively new development, but this is not the case. Back in the 19th Century individuals were striving to counteract the excess and waste of the industrial revolution.

One such pioneer was William Morris. His enduring mantra ‘have nothing in your home you do not believe to be beautiful or know to be useful,’ is more relevant than ever. The Arts & Crafts movement put moral responsibility back into furniture and interior design. Ernest Gimson made his Windsor chairs from ash, beech and elm sourced from local woodland. Given the fact that antique Windsor chairs are still very popular today, it is hard to get more sustainable than that.

It wasn’t just wooden furniture, either. Bamboo and rattan, both rapidly renewing plants, boomed from the Mid Century onwards. Leading designers of the age transformed them into stylish wicker furniture and homeware. Sustainable production certainly didn’t sacrifice style then, and it doesn’t now.

Through timeless appeal

Antiques are not bound by style, however. They are sustainable because they are not subject to the whims of fashion. Modern furniture companies jump on emerging trends and overhaul their collections when they are no longer fashionable. Antique and vintage designs, on the other hand, have a very enduring appeal. Take the iconic Chesterfield sofa, for example. Since its conception in mid 18th Century, the mighty button back has never been considered passé.

Likewise, a 17th Century oak refectory table has survived for over 300 years and lived to tell the tale. Such a piece may have characterful grooves and a deep aged patina, but its solid construction means it will likely go on for hundreds more. Aside from anything else, these are investment pieces. An antique dining table will serve you and probably your children and grandchildren too. It won't ask for much in return other than an occasional polish or reinforcement. A small price to pay, we think.

You need only flick through this month’s interiors magazines to see that we are moving in the right direction. Ethical sourcing and a ‘period meets contemporary' aesthetic are top of the agenda for an increasing number of interior designers. This sway is not only good for the planet, but for the end result. When you hire an interior designer, you don’t want them to present you with something akin to a department store showroom. You want something layered and lived in; this is what antiques provide in spades.

Making antiques work for you

For some, antiques feel too special, too majestic, for their lifestyle. But respecting antiques doesn't mean having no relationship with them. You can still be careful whilst making bold choices. We are seeing something of a ‘recovering revolution,’ whereby contemporary fabrics breathe new life into period pieces. This is a great way to adapt antiques to your taste. You might love the imposing proportions and design of a Victorian armchair, but the faded and dated covering? Not so much.

Part of the reason for the current throwaway culture is our reluctance to put a bit of work in. Less than 1 in 10 people are willing to repair an item to extend its life – a fact I’m sure would horrify our ancestors. Restoration and upcycling are not only satisfying, but they also connect you to your interiors in a personal way. If DIY is not for you, many talented experts are on hand to help. Read some tips for the amateur restorer from our in-house professional Dave.

The truth is there is a vast spectrum of antique and vintage pieces out there. Our collection offers something for every soul, from traditional Georgian furniture to cool vintage memorabilia. Not only are our pieces an antidote for flat interiors, but they are also an ethical choice. The best thing? There is no flatpack assembly involved.

Get inspired with our latest lookbook, 'The conscious interior.'

'Work from home.’ It’s the phrase that has defined the last ten months or so of our lives. Whether or not home has always been the natural habitat for your work, many have rushed to transform part of their house into a workspace. The Lorfords collection is full of unique pieces that will bring your dream Mid Century Modern home office to life.

The psychology of our interiorsJohn Guida fashion designs, lucite lamps, mid century furniture

Studies show that the more personal control we have over our office space, the happier we are. The ability to get creative with our workspace and have our favourite furnishings close at hand is a silver lining of the current circumstances.

One of the biggest challenges of staying at home has been drawing a line between work time and our personal lives. This gives you all the more reason to invest in your office space and create an environment you want to spend all day in, before returning to those parts of your home that you associate with relaxing.

Calm, uncluttered surroundings encourage efficiency and productivity. This can be difficult to achieve at home, but by dedicating a space for work you are halfway there, and Mid Century Modern design will do the rest.

It can be easy to feel as though you are ‘playing office’ whilst working from home, so it’s important to get creative with your space and invest in it. Stylish and useful furniture is conducive to your productivity, as well as your happiness.

A la modeMid Century side table, lucite magazine holder, chinoiserie chair

Media and popular culture have made Mid Century design an object of fascination. From the smooth teak and glass of the Mad Men office to the contemporary prints and low chairs of Miranda Priestley’s office in The Devil Wears Prada, the understated glamour of a Mid Century Modern office is well-known.

The post-war period was a new age of prosperity, and many migrated to urban and suburban areas. After the horrors of war, there was a desire for more human, organic and natural design. Inspiration was sought from America and Scandinavia, and designers eagerly embraced new materials like plywood and plastic. Manufacturers had machinery and mass production at their disposal, so luckily many fantastic pieces survive today.

Furnishing newly built homes and smaller living spaces saw design take on new priorities, and functionality was a top priority. Designers didn’t skimp on style, however, and the iconic designs they brought to life have timeless appeal.

Mid Century designersJapanned cupboard, Mid Century Modern, home office

Designers of the Mid Century Modern period wanted to make furniture accessible to everyone, not just the very wealthy. The contributors to this new democratic style were many, including Arne Jacobsen and Harry Bertoia. Ray and Charles Eames were the design power couple of their day, and it's their executive desk that graces Don Draper's office in Mad Men.

Far from dull, design in this period was full of juxtapositions. Designs were extremely varied, and you might struggle to spot what a marshmallow sofa and a teak sideboard have in common. However, there were certain principles that united these designers in their plight: fine craftsmanship, quality, and chic style.

The straight-lined silhouettes of Mid Century Modern furniture make it the perfect choice for an office. Manufacturers of the period, such as Herman Miller, focussed in on office furniture and produced desks, chairs, and savvy storage solutions. George Nelson was a key mover and shaker in Mid Century Modern design. His iconic Storagewall design captured attention far and wide and he is credited with designing the first L-Shaped desk.

Redefine 'office'Mid Century Modern, home office

There’s more to working life than a desk and a chair. Nobody wants to work amongst empty cups of tea and a teetering stack of paperwork, but many of us do. It may be a cliché, but it’s difficult to argue with the concept of ‘tidy desk, tidy mind.’

It's often unrealistic to reimagine a whole room of the home in one style, but a few key pieces will transform a space. Credenzas and sideboards were already furniture stalwarts, but they were revolutionised in this period. Fitting unobtrusively against the wall, they provide storage and a surface for display. Most importantly, a sideboard or low cabinet means you can keep stress-inducing clutter out of sight.

When it comes to designing an office space, the mood can tend towards the clinical. Mid Century Modern is the perfect antidote to monotony because designers reinterpreted basic furniture with innovation and creative flair. Designers made chairs that were lower and broader, often supported on splayed UFO-style legs. They made many office-style chairs, with reclining and swivel functions. You've got your pick when it comes to desk chairs and should indulge in a big upholstered armchair for when you need a break.

Lighting was the major triumph of Mid Century design, and designs are famous and sought-after today. From practical floor lamps to Sciolari's spectacular sputnik light, lighting is the ultimate flourish for a 20th Century home office. Maison Charles’ iconic palm standard lamps demonstrate how natural forms were embraced in this period, and they make a great statement in an office setting.

Punchy Mid Century modern accentsLucite magazine holder, Mid Century Modern, home office

20th Century design was far from solely utilitarian. Designs from this period were full of creative flair, and this should be reflected in a Mid Century Modern office. This was the heyday of faux tortoiseshell, glass, contrasting woods, bright colour, and abstract art. Adorn a brass and glass coffee table with a lucite magazine holder, or fabulous colourful glasswork by Val Saint Lambert.

There’s no point in working in a space that won’t inspire creativity and progress. Surround yourself with fabulous contemporary art and sculpture that makes you feel content and calm. Colour and character are key to boosting your mood in a long working day. This was an age of bold and pioneering design, and by surrounding yourself with examples of it you encourage the same in your work endeavours.

Whatever your personal style, there is something to love in this spectacular period of design. Mid Century Modern pieces have the power to transform a space into the perfect home office. For further inspiration, have a browse of our lookbook: Office Envy.

Did life exist before Mad Men?* It’s a question I’ve been pondering a lot since the peerless series faded to black for the final time (*answer: yes, but it didn’t look as good).

Critics may have focused on the internal machinations at the Sterling Cooper ad agency but, as we all know, the real star of the show was the sumptuous mid-century styled sets: Gorgeous eyefuls of caramel coloured interiors with sleek, sensuously curved furniture and desk lamps that deserved their own mini-series. Has there ever been a tv series so determined to make the viewer drool with couch envy? Of course our love of all things mid-century was already well established by the time Don Draper sparked up his first Lucky Strike. Hard to believe that it’s twenty years since furniture of the 1950s, ‘60s and ‘70s came in from the cold and started making serious headway in the style supplements and salerooms. Fashions come and go; nowhere is this more true than in the conjoined worlds of antiques and interiors, but, two decades on, mid-century is still here, stronger than ever. It remains the chic-style option it always was and, no longer hobbled by its former retroassociations, Mid-Century has taken its place alongside Art Nouveau and Art Deco as an established epoch in 20thcentury design history. Before you embark on a full Mad Men inspired home makeover, here’s my guide to the essentials of mid-century furniture, a style that remains as fresh and innovative in 2016 as it did half a century ago.

What do we mean by mid-century?

As the name suggests, the style dates from the middle decades of the 20thcentury, roughly from the mid-1940s to the late 1960s. Rather like Art Deco, the name was coined long after the period in question. When it first emerged, our parents and grandparents knew it as Contemporary, and as a decorative style it influenced everything from the shape of a sofa, a vase or a coffee pot to the pattern on a tablecloth. It was youthful, stylish and bang up to date, and that was exactly what people wanted. Every style comes with its cultural baggage and mid-century speaks of an era of confidence, one which looked ahead optimistically to a bright future of ever increasing economic prosperity with more money and leisure time to relax and enjoy life. Mid-century interiors were all about chic style and ease of living, and this was also reflected in the furniture. Small wonder it appeals to us so much today.

Deciphering the mid-century style can at first seem something of a challenge. Certainly not all modern furniture from this period will be in the mid-century style. Plastic inflatable furniture from the 1960s, for example, is definitely not mid-century (it would be an example of Pop design, in case you were wondering). As anMid-Century Interior  illustration, let’s try this: At first sight a Danish rosewood and leather dining chair by Neils Moller seems to have very little in common with an American high-gloss white fibreglass Tulip chair by Eero Saarinen, yet they’re both hailed as mid-century design classics. So what’s going on? Well, I’d say what unites these seemingly unrelated chairs boils down to three things: simple, modern elegance, functional comfort and fine craftsmanship.  In my view, it’s the mix of those three essential elements which is the hallmark of mid-century design. Mid-century designers had a dictum: Form follows function, in practice this meant no excess decoration or unnecessary flourishes.  In less capable hands it’s a mantra that might have resulted in some very boring furniture. Fortunately for us, the generation of designers who followed it was one of the best the design world has ever seen. With the possible exception of the Regency period in the early 19thcentury, perhaps no other point in history has produced quite the same number of top calibre artists and designers as the 1950s and ‘60s: Charles and Ray Eames, Robin Day, Eero Saarinen, Harry Bertoia and scores more. Unlike the Regency period, however, when only the wealthiest could afford the best furniture, mid-century designers were driven by a mission to bring good design to the many rather than the few and embraced mass-production with the result that their designs are still relatively plentiful today and Amen to that. But the mid-century movement is more than a mere roll-call of designer names (nice though that is). The philosophy of good design available to all, which those great designers championed, was taken up by manufacturers at the more affordable end of the market, with many smaller factories producing good quality, well designed furniture within easy reach of the middle class. The names of most of these designers have mostly been lost to history but today, these pieces can be picked up at reasonable prices while still ticking all the boxes for style and quality.

Where did the mid-century style originate?

After World War Two furniture designers began to move away from the hard lines and polished chrome of pre-war German inspired modernism towards a softer, warmer aesthetic. The great architect-designer Marcel Breuer led the way and others soon followed. The mood was for something more human, more organic and for this everyone looked north. Since the 1930s Scandinavian, especially Finnish, designers had developed a soft modernism, relying on wood rather than metal and drawing on their own native skills in cabinetmaking, producing designs that were simple, understated and elegant. This fitted the mood exactly and Finland, Sweden and Denmark moved centre stage, becoming the benchmark for the best of mid-century style. What we tend to think of as classic mid-century furniture, in rosewood or teak with soft, fluid curves and simplicity of form has its roots in 1940s and ‘50s Scandinavia. It wasn’t just the north that had a part to play in the mid-century look. The 1950s was a time of convergence in design, when Italian, French and British, as well as Nordic influences began to merge together, creating a style that was truly international in its outlook. But at its heart the mid-century style was solidly American. America in the 1950s was the powerhouse economy of the world with previously undreamt of levels of wealth and international influence. A new generation of young designers set out to reshape the look of modern America, pushing the boundaries of furniture design by experimenting with new materials and manufacturing techniques.

Harry Bertoia (1915-78) was born in Italy and moved to the USA in 1930. He studied at the Cranbrook Academy of Fine Arts near Detroit, Michigan and eventually became head of the metal working department at the academy. Bertoia brought a sculptor’s eye to his furniture designs, particularly in the series of wire mesh chairs he designed in the early 1950s. The Bird lounge chair, designed in 1951-2 for Knoll, has been described as looking like a piece of sculpture suspended in space. The chair, which was mass-produced but by hand rather than machine, was made by welding a sheet of metal mesh into shape and then welding it on to the wire legs.

Mid-century designers eagerly embraced the possibilities created by new materials like plywood and plastic. Eero Saarinen (1910-61) was particularly influenced by developments in the field of plastics. His Tulip chair was one of the first chairs designed with a single pedestal base and was revolutionary when it was introduced in 1956. A true Modernist, Saarinen’s chair was a solution to what he saw as the clutter of chair legs under a dining table. A design classic, the Tulip chair anticipates the Pop design movement of the 1960s by a good ten years and is every bit as striking today as it was when it was new.

Although America and Scandinavia drove the mid-century look, other countries produced significant designers whose work is highly desirable today. In Britain, William Plunkett (1928-2013) was a designer with a background in engineering who worked in a highly individual style. Like Harry Bertoia, he combined his engineering skills with a sculptural flair and created a series of elegant metal-framed seating that won many design awards.

An essential ingredient in the mid-century interior was lighting. Lighting has, of course, always had a practical use in the home but was now more closely integrated in the overall decorative scheme. The floor lamp, designed in 1950 by George Rispal is a highpoint in mid-century lighting design. The coolie shade and cylindrical shade provide task and ambient lighting respectively, while the strikingly organic form, inspired by the work of German-French artist and sculptor Hans Arp (1886-1966), means it works as a piece of sculpture every bit as much as a lamp.

Well designed, refined, slick without being cold, at times a little decadent but never camp and very grown up; the appeal of mid-century furniture is highly seductive and it’s easy to understand why, twenty years after its rediscovery, it’s in ruder health than ever.

Does the 1970s deserve to be remembered as the decade taste forgot? Absolutely not, says antiques expert Chris Yeo. It was a time of bold experiments and high glamour.

There is, they say, nothing new in fashion. Is there anything new in design? Whatever your thoughts it can’t be denied that the lure of the past has always been a potent source of inspiration. The Romans took their style tips for everything from togas to temples from the Ancient Greeks, the Elizabethans got dewy eyed over the Middle Ages and the Victorians were besotted by anything Medieval (apart from Chaucer, who was far too dirty for them). Not much has changed except that, latterly, we have tended to take a leaf from the more recent pages of style’s back catalogue. Anyone who was around in the 1970s will remember that the 1950s held a powerful draw and now it’s the turn of the ‘70s itself to be the focus of our rose-tinted spectacles. Ah, the Seventies. They called it the decade taste forgot. Of course, “they” were the 1980s, which, if we’re talking taste, is nothing short of the pot calling the kettle black. But now the decade that brought us Abba, the hostess trolley and the three-day week is being mined by a new generation of tastemakers. Fashion has been nostalgic for the 1970s for the last few seasons, with tinted sunglasses, long floral dresses and straw handbags omnipresent on the high street and catwalks alike. However, when it comes to interior design, it’s been a different story. For years, the very mention of the word ‘Seventies’ was enough to strike fear and loathing into otherwise reasonable, aesthetically broad-minded people and it seems old prejudices die hard. Style pundits from Wallpaper magazine recently collated a shortlist of the most egregious design faux pas of the past half-a-century and guess which decade came top? But look beyond the avocado bathroom suites and macramé plant pot holders and a different picture soon emerges.

In the 1970s, interior design reached a level of exuberance that has never since been equalled. The decade centred around bold patterns and textures, strong colour schemes, and a playful approach to the adaptation of space. The austere 1950s had picked up on straight-lined 1930s modernism and run with it; the radical social changes of the 1960s threw familiar aesthetics up in the air and dropped them back to earth in a psychedelic explosion and, as the mid-century slid into the 1970s, a bold new design era settled in. The great titans of 20th century design – Mies, Marcel and Arne– hung up their pencils and went into retirement leaving the playing field clear for a new generation of designers with fresh ideas. Decorating, too, shook off its formalism, mixing patterns, time periods, materials, and colours in fresh, exciting and occasionally shocking ways. And in the decade that taste apparently forgot, certain design groups were aiming to overthrow the idea of “good taste” altogether. The so-called radical design groups such as Archizoom, formed in Italy at the turn of the new decade, were up for creating playful and provocative furniture and lighting which became the building blocks for Post-Modernism in the 1980s. 
The Seventies was a study in contrasts and contradiction: austerity and decadence, muddy earth tones and eye-popping colours. Trends that began life in the hippy communes of Haight-Ashbury grew-up, got a haircut and went mainstream. Italian designers schmoozed the world with their take on high-tech, high gloss futurism and, all over the world – from Studio 54 to Abigail’s Party – a mood of defiant decadence reigned supreme. As David Netto in The New York Times memorably put it:“The 70s were sensual and decadent. People were unafraid to take risks. The furniture was made for hanging out, lounging or sex — activities infinitely more tempting than what was going on in the places where post-war design made its mark. Imagine trying to make out on a Barcelona Chair."

Decadence and glamour were the twin beats that throbbed throughout a decade that was bookmarked by Bowie at its beginning and Grace Jones at its end – oh, be still my beating heart! They were the torch bearers of the new mood that thrived in a world filled with the harsh realities of economic uncertainties and political strife. In a decade that saw two miners’ strikes, countless I.R.A. bombing campaigns, runaway inflation and powdered orange juice, what to do but loose yourself in a whirlwind of hedonism? A mood of defiant decadence was abroad, whether it was glam rockers “gender bending” – as contemporary parlance had it – on Top of the Pops or Bianca Jagger riding into studio 54 on the back of a white stallion (because, let’s face it, how else do you let people know it’s your birthday?) In London the mood was encapsulated, branded and retailed to perfection at Big Biba, opened on Kensington High Street in 1973. Biba had started life as mail order fashion outfit but over just a few years had come to dominate the UK fashion scene. Big Biba was the firms last great shout before bankruptcy in 1975 brought an end to its reign of fabulousness. Housed in Art Deco splendour at the former Barker’s department store, complete with live flamingos on the roof garden, Big Biba offered an interior vision that took elements of Hollywood’s Golden Age and mixed it louche colours, peacock feathers and peacock chairs, crushed velvets and Art Nouveau prints. It was bold, daring and worked perfectly a world jointly ruled by Marc Bolan and Pan’s People (ask your parents).

At the same time as Biba was refashioning homes in the UK, Willy Rizzo (1928-2013) was introducing a chic – not to say disco – sensibility into furniture design. Rizzo had started his career as a fashion photographer but, at the suggestion of his friends and clients – the great and the good of fashion and film, he took a sideways step into furniture design. He was soon swamped with orders and requests. Rizzo designed and produced more than thirty pieces of furniture: sofas, consoles, hi-fi furniture, coffee tables and lighting, all of which were handmade. Rizzo’s world is one where coffee tables rotate like a vinyl disc on a turntable and then open up to reveal an integrated ice bucket – perfect for those pre or post-club Campari. He opened boutiques across France and Europe and had points of sale in New York City, Miami and Los Angeles. However, in 1978, Rizzo gave it all up to return to photography, his first love. Rizzo’s furniture design channelled the sophistication of Mies van der Rohe and Le Corbusier, his pieces combining clean, simple lines with bold geometric forms and a delicate handling of materials. The result is classic modernism and very chic.

Willy Rizzo operated at the glamourous end of the sleek International style, a movement which took basic Form Follows Function Modernism and added a sheen of Jet Set sophistication. Luxury was the watchword and materials like rosewood, bronze and chrome were in. The interior design world’s new face could, in a way, be summed up in a single word: plastics. Technological advances had begun to create more flexible varieties that could be moulded into striking, sensual forms—strong but weightless, often without any hard edges. Designers revelled in the creative possibilities offered by new materials, especially plastics, which could be coloured boldly, mass-produced and, therefore, enjoyed by a wide audience. Lucite was the brand name for a clear acrylic plastic resembling glass or rock crystal, which really took off in the ‘70s. This lightweight material was easy to mould and carve and was an instant hit for everything from costume jewellery to furniture and, of course, lighting. Lucite gives an instant hit of space age glamour, as intoxicating now as it ever was.And it seems you can’t keep a good decade down. These days the once maligned ‘70s are bang on-trend, with designers, architects and style savvy buyers all eagerly embracing the decade’s bold and brash personality, from Tom Dixon’s gloriously retro copper globe pendants to a renewed love for houseplants, via bold, clashing patterns and old-school gold accessories. That the decade should be ripe for plundering for inspiration should come as no surprise the question is how could it take so long to happen?

We’ve included a few iconic items within this blog but please browse our website for many more incredibly cool 1970’s pieces.
Images: Lorfords own & Willy Rizzo