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Posted October 27, 2015

                                              

VALDESE, N.C. – Commercial interiors giants Valdese Weavers and Haworth announcd the winners of Stitch Me, an original textile design competition held in concert with PMC Commercial Interiors.

 

Winners will be honored November 4 at 4:30 p.m. at the Contemporary Art Museum in Raleigh, N.C. The design community is invited to attend.

 

Four winning designs were chosen. The grand prize winning fabric will be upholstered on Haworth’s Harbor Work Lounge and Ottoman.

 

Highwoods Properties

 

This design features a chevron motif in shades of gray with a touch of turquoise. It represents the love and support one receives from family, and is taken from a blanket pattern woven by the team leader’s grandmother.

 

FLAD

Valdese, Haworth name Stitch Me competition winners

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All four winners' designers in the Stitch Me design competition.

Varied widths of blue and white broken stripes on a pink background. The design is inspired by the Haworth Harbor Work Lounge and the blurred line between work and play, formal and informal. It plays on the need for flexibility in furnishings to support the changing work styles of today.

 

Gensler

 

The primary motif repeated in this pattern is inspired by a decorative door frame.  A sense of movement and depth is created through layering different spacing and height variations of the ogee-like motif. Featured in a medium gray color palette with blue and purple accents.

 

Gensler – Grand Prize Winner

 

A watercolor effect in shades of energetic red, inspired by the organic textures created by watercolors. The pattern features a wide brush stroke adjacent to an artistic stripe that runs the length of the chair and ottoman.

 

The competition, which kicked off in April, challenged Triangle-area of North Carolina architecture and design firms to create their own original textile design. Each team had three weeks to deliver their design, which was judged based on materiality, creativity and application. Designs were limited to a 13.5 inch horizontal repeat with no detail finer than one-sixth of an inch, and a 4-6 color limitation.
 

Source: Valdese Weavers and Hayworth

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