Homes & Antiques

JAY BLADES: LET’S COLLABORAT­E

Jay divulges some of his future design plans and shares his thoughts on the bene ts and challenges of nding the right person to collaborat­e with

- Jay Blades

Our columnist on working with other artisans

Collaborat­ion for me is more about being inspired by someone else. They don’t necessaril­y have to be in the eld of furniture or upholstery, they can be photograph­ers and knitwear designers who have created something beautiful. I admire what these cra speople do and want to nd a creative way to fuse their ideas into my work.

I have found the easiest way to do this is by seeking out fabric designers. I’ll see a pa ern that captures my a ention and I’ll know instantly that it belongs on a particular chair that I have waiting in my workshop. There are some fabrics that I have come across, which I haven’t yet identi ed the perfect chair for.

With this in mind, I feel the natural next step for me would be to bring out a range of furniture. I would love to design an item from the ground up. I do have some designs in my head, but it’s about nding the right person to collaborat­e with. For example, I’d need to nd someone who makes things using sustainabl­e timber.

When looking for someone to team up with, I would always want to ask them: ‘How much waste do you generate?’ Because everybody produces waste and it’s what you do with it that determines whether you’re thinking about the future of the planet.

Every time I work on an upholstery project, I always make sure I cut the fabric in a particular way so that I have the least amount of it le over. It’s then my duty to gure out how I can use those scraps – so it might mean that I put a small piece on a stool or sew two bits together to do the back of a chair. Almost every piece of le over material is used on another job.

When you look at my chairs, you’ll sometimes see I’ve put a li le bit of fabric on the back or the piping doesn’t go all the way round. The inspiratio­n for this originated with a chair I upholstere­d a few years ago – it’s not because I had initially designed it that way on purpose but because I had run out of material. Now, this is a feature design of mine that is sustainabl­e at the same time.

I’m also not what you’d call a ‘commercial manufactur­er’,

I am more in tune with the slow movement. It once took me two years to re-cover a chair, simply because I had to wait for the right le over pieces of fabric to come along. So the challenge would be to nd someone who is happy to work this way too.

‘It once took me two years to re-cover a chair, simply because I had to wait for the right le over pieces of fabric to come along.’

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom