Archive for the ‘designers’ Category

An 8-page spread featuring Pierre Paulin in Metropolis

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

Wow. Metropolis Magazine sent writer Véronique Vienne to the Roset factory in Briord to see just how our furniture is upholstered, “At Ligne Roset, upholstering is not just a métier; it’s an athletic challenge. The men and women whose job it is to dress the furniture are highly trained perfectionists exhibiting charming degrees of stamina and savoir faire.”

At 81, Pierre Paulin who designed the Pumpkin chair and Tanis desk for last year’s collection and also designed the private apartments of French president Georges Pompidou is still on the cutting edge. “What drives my work are technological breakthroughs,” Paulin says. “I do not start with the idea of a form. I try to solve problems with the most advanced methods available to me.”
Read the whole article and see some amazing pics of Paulin’s designs and the Ligne Roset factory in Briord at Metropolis Magazine.

metropolis-may-2009-1

Clouds Featured in the New York Times

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009
Clouds in the NY TImes

Clouds in the New York Times

Writer Elaine Louie Interviewed Erwan Bouroullec:
Clouds, a new sculptural fabric by the Parisian designers Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec, is made up of multiple pieces that can be linked together in infinite ways. It was inspired by North Tiles, large fabric-covered foam pieces that interlock to form walls, which the Bouroullec brothers designed in 2006.

North Tiles worked on an architectural scale, but it didn’t work on a smaller scale, Erwan Bouroullec explained. Clouds does.

Each piece has a core of synthetic foam and is faceted so that it can “bend in an unexpected line,” Mr. Bouroullec said, creating various shapes that can be hung on the wall or suspended from the ceiling to alter the experience of space in a room.

Clouds, which is manufactured by Kvadrat, will be available in April from Ligne Roset in Tempo, a flame-resistant polyester, and Divina, a wool. It comes in boxes of 8 ($440 to $495, depending on fabric) or 24 ($1,105 to $1,235), and numerous color combinations. (The piece above is made of 104 Divina tiles in the light-and-dark-blue combination.)

See the whole article at the NYT

Maison et Objets 2009: Confluences

Thursday, February 19th, 2009
confluences

confluences

Confluences is a seating collection by a young designer named Phillipe Nigro.  Michel Roset, the fourth generation leading the company, has a real knack for discovering new talent, nourishing their craft and putting them on the international map. This is how it worked with the Bouroullec brothers, who conceived the acclaimed Facett collection, and now it looks like Nigro might be next in line with the debut of his Confluences.

Ligne Roset first introduced the prototype for Confluences at Art Basel Miami in December 2008;  now we see the entire collection, pieces of several sizes, conceived with the idea that each  seat has  a different depth so as to be comfortable for short and tall alike.  The look is precise and asymmetrical, playful and with a distinct youthfulness.

NY Times profiles Moel designer Inga Sempe

Saturday, January 3rd, 2009

The fall issue of the NY Times Style Magazine profiles Inga Sempé, designer of Moel:

“With high backs and channel quilting, the Moel settee and armchair for Ligne Roset were inspired by a chair design in the company’s archive. Sempé liked the design’s expansive, comfortable shape, but thought it looked ‘’very ’70s — and I hate the ’70s. I don’t like objects to look ‘cool.’ I wanted the advantage of softness and comfort, but with straight lines.’’ The rigid exterior of each piece is covered in felt or leather; Sempé likes the contrast between the hard outside and the soft inside and calls the leather option a lighter version of a leather sofa.”