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A New Generation Defining the Future of American Design


Look to a rising generation of U.S.-based talent reshaping furniture design through material intelligence, experimentation, and innovation.

U.S.-Based Designers Changing The Scene

Jackson Schwartz of Hennepin Made

Photography by Ryan Lodermeier.
Photography courtesy of Hennepin Made.

Product: Emerson
Standout: Named for the American Transcendentalist philosopher/poet Ralph Waldo Emerson, this wet-rated Minneapolis-made sconce in cast Swedish glass (and various metal finishes) by Hennepin Made is a study in suspended motion.


Louis Venturelli of Louis Venturelli

Photography by Sam Pickart.
Photography by Joe Kramm.

Product: The Painted Chair
Standout: Brooklyn-based painter Louis Venturelli three-dimensionalizes his abstract language by way of a solid-maple chair, crafted with fourth-generation New York builder Mark Jupiter, that’s finished in blue lacquer.


Tania Leipold of Laine + Alliage

Photography courtesy of Laine + Aliliage.
Photography by Courtesy of Laine + Alliage.

Product: Archipelago
Standout: Gypsum dunes and cacti were among Brooklyn-based French designer Tania Leipold of Laine + Alliage’s muses for a grass-cloth wallcovering whose color-blocked forms, digitally printed in Connecticut, are based on her own paintings. 


Johannes Pauwen and Michaele Simmering of Kalon

Photography by Katrina Dickson.
Photography courtesy of Kalon.

Product: Elemental
Standout: Informed by American modernist design, Los Angeles studio Kalon’s floating side table of sustainably harvested Douglas fir and brushed aluminum celebrates tailored proportions and material restraint.


Jacob and Chelsie Starley of Astraeus Clarke

Photography by Chelsie Starley.
Photography courtesy of Astraeus Clarke.

Product: Vesper
Standout: Crafted in the Astraeus Clarke’s New York workshop, this solid-mahogany dining table—cloaked in clear or colored gloss lacquer and punctuated with lathed-steel joinery—conjures old Hollywood glamour. 


Emma Gardner of Emma Gardner Design

Photography by Molly Haas.
Photography courtesy of Emma Gardner.

Product: Scatter
Standout: Play, a hand-knotted rug collection by Emma Gardner that tweaks classic genres like plaids and florals, posits a self-posed question, “What can be more American than reinvention?”


Justin Nelson of Fernweh Woodworking

Photography by Ben Edwards.
Photography courtesy of Fernweh Woodworking.

Product: Oxbend Windsor
Standout: The Bend, Oregon, Fernweh Woodworking founder’s experimentations with steam-bent greenwood (i.e. not kiln-dried) resulted in a shapely dining chair, with optional leather seat pad and backrest, that doubles as a valet stand. 


Annie Downing of Annie Downing Interiors

Photography by Cydney Cosette.
Photography courtesy of Annie Downing.

Product: Micro Lotus
Standout: As a kid, interior designer Annie Downing spent holidays painting alongside her grandmother at their Texas ranch; now, she launches her first wallpaper collection, featuring dainty details rendered in fibrous nonwoven paper or grass cloth. 



Source: https://interiordesign.net
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