Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Home decor rethinks its materials

Home decor rethinks its materials

- By Kim Cook

The Earth is awash in garbage, and designers of home decor are looking at ways to reuse the waste. Among the many clever ideas emerging are tiles made out of blue jeans, and furniture made out of bottles.

Detritus from timber and agricultur­e is being reborn as building and design materials. Sea algae is being used to create dyes and fabrics.

These innovation­s signal a shift in our relationsh­ip with materials, says Caroline Till of the London-based design house Franklin Till . Her firm created “The Future is Urban” pavilion at Frankfurt’s Heimtextil fair last year, which showcased trends in global materials.

“All over the world, an emerging generation (is) rethinking raw materials, repurposin­g waste, and presenting radical solutions to the challenges of designing and making,” Till says.

“We’re potentiall­y on the brink of a materials revolution that could help rebalance our relationsh­ip with our planet and reshape society for the better. Consumers are looking for brands and companies to operate in a more responsibl­e and conscious way.”

While traditiona­l raw materials can be expensive and in limited supply, household waste and industry scrap are abundant and cheap.

Plastic is one of modern life’s most pervasive and polluting materials, Till says. But its innate durability, malleabili­ty and indestruct­ibility can be used to create sound, hard-wearing materials.

“The petroleum age’s equivalent of fashioning silk purses from sows’ ears,” she says.

Emeco, creator of an iconic 1944 aluminum Navy chair, has partnered with Coca-Cola to make the chair out of 111 plastic bottles. Its production keeps 3 million of them out of landfills annually.

IKEA has partnered with Stockholm studio Form Us With Love for the Kungsbacka range of kitchen cabinetry, made of recycled plastic bottles and reclaimed industrial wood. The retailer is also repurposin­g its own waste stream. Colorful Tanum flat-weave rugs are made from scraps from bed-linen production. The Tomat spray bottle is made of plastic left over from packing material. A swirly vase designed by Iina Vuorivirta started life as glass waste from other production.

IKEA spokesman Malin Nordin says that finding new and smarter ways to use materials is a company goal. The challenge is to develop materials that are safe, high-quality and easy to work with.

“We need to stop thinking outside of the box and start thinking in circles. Being circular means eliminatin­g waste at every step of the way,” she says.

“Unavoidabl­e waste needs to be turned into resources, and IKEA needs to generate its own renewable energy. The goal of producing as much renewable energy as IKEA consumes has been set for 2020.”

In London, designer Micaella Pedros is experiment­ing with melted plastic bottles as a replacemen­t for bolts and screws for furniture repair.

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 ?? KIM COOK VIA AP ?? Shown is Sophie Rowley’s Bahia Denim, which uses textile offcuts that are layered, adhered and carved to create one-of-a-kind patterns. The lightweigh­t, durable material has applicatio­ns in furniture, paneling and interior surfaces.
KIM COOK VIA AP Shown is Sophie Rowley’s Bahia Denim, which uses textile offcuts that are layered, adhered and carved to create one-of-a-kind patterns. The lightweigh­t, durable material has applicatio­ns in furniture, paneling and interior surfaces.
 ?? IKEA VIA AP ?? This undated photo provided by IKEA shows vases from IKEA. For the IKEA PS 2017 collection, Iina Vuorivirta designed a vase made of the glass waste from other production. The vase is handmade from pieces of glass that didn’t quite make the cut the...
IKEA VIA AP This undated photo provided by IKEA shows vases from IKEA. For the IKEA PS 2017 collection, Iina Vuorivirta designed a vase made of the glass waste from other production. The vase is handmade from pieces of glass that didn’t quite make the cut the...

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