Discover the four young talents Habitat considers "Designers of Tomorrow"

News Infurma26/02/2018
Discover the four young talents Habitat considers “Designers of Tomorrow”
Discover the four young talents Habitat considers “Designers of Tomorrow”

Habitat has named four designers as “Designers of Tomorrow“, thanks to their talent. The firm see in them the future of design, a gold mine called to renew the design landscape.

These young, fresh and free artists offer proposals that distill that careless point that gives the audacity. They have created rugs and cushions overflowing with color, with prints that imitate nature or play geometry. From Paris, Porto, Falmouth or Helsinki, they have traced their creative universes to propose textile prints with the common denominator of joy: abundance of color and shapes and, at times, also a formal simplicity that provides lightness.

GOMBO Collection by Floriane Jacques: Look to Africa

She is French but has drunk African prints and street art to design Gombo. Floriane Jacques, graphic designer and freelance illustrator (she completed her final year in the design studio of Habitat), pays homage to the gombo flower, widely reproduced in African fabrics, for a free version that is printed on a carpet, a cushion and a vase.

STAMEN Collection by Becca Allen : Floral Inspiration

Since her study in Falmouth, the illustrator, graphic designer and English art director Becca Allen has drawn a serene floral motif to stamp the carpet and cushion of her Stamen collection. Its geometric interpretation of pistils and stamens, in organic tones, shines for its delicacy and elegance.

JANINE Collection : The daring geometry of Janine Rewell

The personal geometry of Janine Rewell, who likes to break the mold, has found new forms in the carpet and cushion that bears her name. Finnish trained in the prestigious Rhode Island School of Design, she has opted in these compositions for a very smooth and balanced color palette.

INFINITE STARWAY Collection : Explosion of color in the Epiforma infinite staircase

The power of the Portuguese Filipe Ferreira and Francisco Ribeiro is felt in his Infinite Starway collection. As in a game of optical illusion, its geometric patterns follow a regular grid. Ferreira and Ribeiero, partly trained in Barcelona, are since 2014 the two halves of the design studio Epiforma.

Source: Habitat
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