Proust on Design: Timothy Corrigan

Proust on Design: Timothy Corrigan | CLOTH & KIND

what is your idea of perfect design happiness?
A WELL-PROPORTIONED ROOM
WITH PLENTY OF NATURAL LIGHT
AND A CLIENT WITH A GOOD BUDGET
WHO SAYS: “AMAZE ME!”

Proust on Design: Timothy Corrigan | CLOTH & KIND

what is your greatest fear in design?
PLASTIC-COVERED FURNITURE…
I SAW SOME IN A FRIEND’S HOME IN COLLEGE
AND HAVE NEVER GOTTEN OVER IT!

which historical design figure do you most identify with?
JEAN-CHARLES MOREUX DID IT ALL.
HE WAS AN ARCHITECT, HE DESIGNED INTERIORS,
HE CREATED FURNITURE AND HE DID LANDSCAPE DESIGN.
A TRUE RENAISSANCE MAN.

Proust on Design: Timothy Corrigan | CLOTH & KIND

which living designer do you most admire?
NEW YORK DESIGN ICON VICENTE WOLF
HAS BEEN A GREAT INSPIRATION.

what profession other than design would you like to attempt?
I WOULD LOVE TO BE A LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT.
WHAT A JOY IT MUST BE TO INTEGRATE SPACE, SHAPE AND FORM
WITH THE MOST WONDERFUL OF ALL MATERIALS -
TREES, SHRUBS, AND FLOWERS.

what is your greatest design extravagance?
MY PORTRAIT COLLECTION.
I HAVE ALWAYS LOVED PORTRAIT PAINTINGS
BECAUSE THEY HAVE THEIR OWN KIND OF ICONOGRAPHY
THAT TELLS YOU ABOUT THE TIME AND PLACE
THAT THE PERSON IN THE PORTRAIT LIVED.

Proust on Design: Timothy Corrigan | CLOTH & KIND

when and where were you happiest with your design?
MY PLACE IN THE FRENCH COUNTRYSIDE,
THE CHATEAU DU GRAND-LUCÉ.
I PURCHASED THE CHATEAU IN 2004
THEN UNDERTOOK ITS MASSIVE RESTORATION AND DECORATION,
BRINGING IT BACK TO ITS FULL GLORY.
IT DOESN’T MATTER WHAT I AM DOING THERE
- PULLING WEEDS, FEEDING THE SWANS, OR WALKING IN THE WOODS -
THIS IS THE PLACE WHERE I FIND THE TRUE MEANING OF JOY.

Proust on Design: Timothy Corrigan | CLOTH & KIND

what do you consider your greatest achievement in design?
I HAVE SO LOVED THE DEVELOPMENT
OF MY NEW LINE OF FABRICS AND FURNITURE FOR SCHUMACHER
AS WELL AS CARPETS FOR PATTERSON, FLYNN & MARTIN
THAT ARE ALL COMING OUT NEXT SPRING.

if you died and came back as another designer or design object,
who or what do you think it would be?
EMILIO TERRY WAS AN INCREDIBLE TASTEMAKER
WHO NEVER REALLY RECEIVED GREAT FAME.
I WOULD LIKE TO COME BACK AS HIM TO INSURE
HE ACHIEVES THE LEVEL OF NOTORIETY HE DESERVES.

what specific design related talent are you lacking
that you would you most like to have?
GOOD HANDWRITING
AND THE ABILITY TO SKETCH WELL…
WHEN IT COMES TO A PEN OR PENCIL,
I AM SEVERELY CHALLENGED!

what is your most treasured design related possession?
A SMALL SILVER AND VERMEIL BOX
WITH ENAMEL AND PORCELAIN
THAT WAS GIVEN BY EMPRESS ELIZABETH (“SISI”) OF AUSTRIA
TO HER NIECE, MY GREAT, GREAT GRANDMOTHER.
IT’S FILLED WITH AN ODD COLLECTION
OF SMALL MEMENTOS FROM MY FAMILY AND CHILDHOOD,
LIKE THE FIRST STARFISH I EVER FOUND
AND SOME OLD KEYS TO THE STABLES
AT MY GRANDMOTHER’S HOUSE.
IT HAS BEEN WITH ME THROUGH TODAY
AND SERVES AS A KIND OF TOUCHSTONE.

Proust on Design: Timothy Corrigan | CLOTH & KIND

what do you regard as the lowest depths of misery in design?
CLOSED MINDED PEOPLE WITH NO DESIRE TO GROW OR LEARN.
IT’S SO IMPORTANT TO ALWAYS BE OPEN TO NEW IDEAS
AND WAYS OF LOOKING AT THINGS…
THAT’S WHEN MAGIC HAPPENS IN DESIGN, AS IN LIFE!

what curse word do you most frequently use?
I AM EMBARRASSED TO SAY IT,
BUT IT WOULD HAVE TO BE
“WHAT THE FU-CK?…YOU’VE GOT TO BE KIDDING ME!”

what is your favorite design related word?
ELEGANT

Proust on Design: Timothy Corrigan | CLOTH & KIND

what is your least favorite design related word?
DELICIOUS OR FABULOUS…
REALLY, WHAT SELF-RESPECTING PERSON
WOULD UTTER SUCH SILLINESS?

what turns you on in design?
HAVING NUMEROUS OPPORTUNITIES
TO TRY NEW AND DIFFERENT THINGS.
I ALSO LOVE THE CHALLENGE OF TAKING ARCHITECTURE
FROM AN EARLIER TIME,
IN WHICH PEOPLE LIVED VERY DIFFERENTLY
AND THEN FIGURING OUT HOW TO APPROPRIATELY UPDATE
THAT STRUCTURE FOR THE WAY WE LIVE AND WORK TODAY.

what turns you off in design?
OH, WHERE DOES ONE BEGIN HERE?
1. I AM SO OVER IKAT THAT I COULD SCREAM.
2. I HATE ROOMS THAT LOOK LIKE THEY JUST CAME
DELIVERED FROM A SHOW ROOM.
3. I DON’T UNDERSTAND MOST OF THE
PLASTIC FURNITURE FROM THE 70’S…
IT WAS CHEAP THEN AND HASN’T IMPROVED WITH AGE.

what is your motto in design?
COMFORTABLE ELEGANCE.
I TRY TO CREATE ENVIRONMENTS WHERE PEOPLE FEEL
AT HOME AND WELCOME. COMFORT IS THE KEY INGREDIENT.

//

IMAGE CREDITS | Images courtesy of Timothy Corrigan, Architectural Digest, Vulgare & OperaGloves.

ABOUT PROUST ON DESIGN | Answered by our design icons, these must-ask questions come from a 19th century parlor game made popular by Marcel Proust, the French novelist, essayist & critic. Proust believed the direct questions and honest responses that they elicited revealed the true nature of the individual. For this column, we have put a design related spin on the traditional questions. While this method has been used by many journalists throughout the years, we were primarily inspired by The Proust Questionnaire, which appears monthly on the back page of one of our all time favorite magazines, Vanity Fair (also Krista’s alma mater). Read all of the previous Proust on Design questionnaires here.

Proust on Design: India Hicks

Proust on Design: India Hicks | CLOTH & KIND
what is your idea of perfect design happiness?
IS THERE SUCH A THING?
A PERFECTLY POOFED PINK SOFA FREE OF DOG HAIR
AND OREO COOKIE STAINS WOULD DO ME JUST FINE.

what is your greatest fear in design?
THAT I WAKE UP ONE MORNING AND FIND THE
ANISH KAPOOR OLYMPIC TOWER IN MY GARDEN.
ANISH IS A CLOSE FRIEND AND BRILLIANT ARTIST
BUT GOOD GOD THAT THING IS HIDEOUS.

which historical design figure do you most identify with?
WELL HAVING DAVID HICKS AS YOUR FATHER
CERTAINLY MEANS HE IS IN MY DNA. QUITE LITERALLY.

which living designer do you most admire?
KELLY WEARSTLER.
NOT BECAUSE I WOULD NECESSARILY WANT
TO LIVE IN ONE OF HER INTERIORS
BUT BECAUSE SHE HAS GUTS, DRIVE, DETERMINATION
AND ABOVE ALL HER OWN POINT OF VIEW.
SHE IS A BEAUTIFUL HARD WORKING WOMAN
WHO HAS MADE IT ON HER OWN
AND IS A MOTHER ON TOP OF ALL THAT.

Proust on Design: India Hicks | CLOTH & KIND

what profession other than design would you like to attempt?
I WOULD LIKE TO EDIT A MAGAZINE.
I LIKE LONG HOURS, I LIKE A CHALLENGE, I LIKE DEADLINES
BUT MOST OF ALL I LIKE BEAUTIFULLY LAID OUT PAGES
OF GOOD DESIGN COUPLED WITH INTERESTING FACT.

what is your greatest design extravagance?
I DON’T HUGELY OVER SPEND
WHEN IT COMES TO DESIGN OR INTERIORS,
PROBABLY LESS SO THAN MOST,
BUT WE DO HAVE HUNDREDS OF COFFEE TABLE BOOKS.
A GREAT INDULGENCE BECAUSE YOU REALLY NEVER READ THE COPY
YOU ONLY FLEETINGLY GLIMPSE AT A WORD OR TWO.

when and where were you happiest with your design?
RIGHT NOW.
RIGHT THIS MINUTE IN MY PALE PINK OFFICE
ON A BAHAMAIN SPRING DAY
KNOWING THAT MY COLLECTION FOR HSN
EXCEEDED ALL OUR EXPECTATIONS AND SALES GOALS.
AM I ALLOWED TO BOAST ABOUT THAT?

Proust on Design: India Hicks | CLOTH & KIND

what do you consider your greatest achievement in design?
MY WEBSITE!
IT’S A HUGE PROJECT AND ENORMOUS COMMITMENT.
BLOOD, SWEAT AND TEARS GO INTO IT.
FEW PEOPLE UNDERSTAND WHAT IT TAKES FROM
A PERSONAL AND FINANCIAL COMMITMENT TO KEEP
AN ECOMMERCE SITE MOVING FORWARD.

if you died and came back as another designer or design object,
who or what do you think it would be?
A SMYTHSON LEATHER BOUND PHOTO ALBUM
IN THE HICKS FLINT WOOD HOUSEHOLD.
MY CHILDREN LOVE THEIR SCRAP BOOKS
FILLED WITH PHOTOS, NOTES, LETTERS, AND MEMORABILIA.
LOVING CHERISHED AND LOOKED AFTER.

Proust on Design: India Hicks | CLOTH & KIND

what specific design related talent are you lacking that you would you most like to have?
THE ACCOUNTING SIDE OF A DESIGN PROJECT!

what is your most treasured design related possession?
MY IPHONE CAMERA.
I RECORD EVERYTHING – TEXTURES, COLOURS, MOODS.

what do you regard as the lowest depths of misery in design?
A HORRIBLE CLIENT.

what curse word do you most frequently use?
I HAVE SEVERAL.
THEY ARE ALL VERY EFFECTIVE.

Proust on Design: India Hicks | CLOTH & KIND

what is your favorite design related word?
PERFECT.

what is your least favorite design related word?
ICON.

what turns you on in design?
FORM AND FUNCTION.

what turns you off in design?
ANYTHING OVER-PRICED.
A CHAIR, A CARPENTER, A CAN OF PAINT.

 what is your motto in design?
“GOOD TASTE AND DESIGN ARE BY NO MEANS DEPENDENT UPON MONEY.”
MY FATHER WROTE THIS INTO MY LITTLE AUTOGRAPH BOOK WHEN I WAS SEVEN.
I DID NOT HAVE A CLUE WHAT IT MEANT.

Proust on Design: India Hicks | CLOTH & KIND

//

IMAGE CREDITS | Images courtesy of India Hicks, her Facebook page & Instagram.
Kelly Wearstler image via Instagram.

ABOUT PROUST ON DESIGN | Answered by our design icons, these must-ask questions come from a 19th century parlor game made popular by Marcel Proust, the French novelist, essayist & critic. Proust believed the direct questions and honest responses that they elicited revealed the true nature of the individual. For this column, we have put a design related spin on the traditional questions. While this method has been used by many journalists throughout the years, we were primarily inspired by The Proust Questionnaire, which appears monthly on the back page of one of our all time favorite magazines, Vanity Fair (also Krista’s alma mater). Read all of the previous Proust on Design questionnaires here.

Proust on Design: Susan Bartlett Crater

Proust on Design: Susan Bartlett Crater | CLOTH & KIND

what is your idea of perfect design happiness?
susan | WHEN I WALK IN TO A ROOM AND FEEL LIKE I AM GOING TO HAVE A GOOD TIME THERE. WHETHER JUST TO SIT QUIETLY AND READ A BOOK OR HAVE A DINNER PARTY FOR 12. IT’S A VIBE OF COMFORT, BEAUTY AND IMAGINATION COMBINED.

what is your greatest fear in design?
susan | THAT THINGS LOOK “WISPY’ WAS ONE OF MY GRANDMOTHER’S MOST NEGATIVE COMMENTS. SHE DID NOT LIKE “WISPY” CURTAINS, COLORS OR ANYTHING WITHOUT SOUL OR HEART. IT ALSO IMPLIES A ROOM IS NOT WELL LOVED.

which historical design figure do you most identify with?
susan | MY GRANDMOTHER SISTER PARISH.

Proust on Design: Susan Bartlett Crater | CLOTH & KIND

which living designer do you most admire?
susan | I LIKE MANY PEOPLE WORKING NOW. MARKHAM ROBERTSJEFFREY BILHUBER, LIBBY CAMERONKATIE RIDDER IN THE NORTH EAST. CATHY KINCAID IN THE SOUTH. RUTHIE SUMMERS, LUCAS STUDIO AND RAMEY CAULKINS IN THE WEST. I LOVE WHAT MY MOTHER APPLE BARTLETT DOES WITH HER  FANTASTIC COLLAGES AND HER STORE.

what profession other than design would you like to attempt?
susan | I USED TO BE A LAWYER SO THIS IS MY SECOND CAREER.
ARTIST PROBABLY – I LOVE COLLAGE, DECOUPAGE, PAINTING.

what is your greatest design extravagance?
susan | FRESH FLOWERS ALL OF THE TIME.

when and where were you happiest with your design?
susan | AT OUR HOUSE IN MAINE, WHICH USED TO BE MY GRANDMOTHERS.

Proust on Design: Susan Bartlett Crater | CLOTH & KIND

what do you consider your greatest achievement in design?
susan | STARTING SISTER PARISH DESIGN.

if you died and came back as another designer or design object,
who or what do you think it would be?
susan | MAYBE AN ANTIQUE GARDEN ORNAMENT OR FOLLY
SO I COULD BE IN A GARDEN ALL OF THE TIME – PREFERABLY NEAR THE OCEAN.

what specific design related talent are you lacking
that you would you most like to have?
susan | A BETTER KNOWLEDGE OF FURNITURE.

what is your most treasured design related possession?
susan | A  GIGANTIC VICTORIAN BIRDCAGE MY GANDMOTHER GAVE ME
TO MAKE INTO A DOLL HOUSE WHEN I WAS 12.

what do you regard as the lowest depths of misery in design?
susan | ROOMS THAT LOOK LIKE CRATE AND BARREL CATALOGUES.

what curse word do you most frequently use?
susan | SHIT.

what is your favorite design related word?
susan | PRETTY.

what is your least favorite design related word?
susan | EDITED.

what turns you on in design?
susan | COLOR, IMAGINATION AND COMFORT.

Proust on Design: Susan Bartlett Crater | CLOTH & KIND

what turns you off in design?
susan | LACK OF THE ABOVE.

what is your motto in design?
susan | OUR COMPANY MOTTO , WHICH IS SOMETHING MY GRANDMOTHER SAID
“IN DESIGN, INNOVATION IS THE ABILITY TO REACH INTO THE PAST AND TAKE WHAT IS GOOD, WHAT IS USEFUL AND WHAT IS LASTING.”

Proust on Design: Susan Bartlett Crater | CLOTH & KIND

//

IMAGE CREDITS | Images courtesy of Sister Parish Design & Lonny’s November 2012 issue (check it out for an excellent article on the three generations of women in Sister Parish’s family)

ABOUT SISTER PARISH DESIGN | Susan Bartlett Crater, granddaughter of the legendary interior decorator “Sister” Parish, was bemoaning the state of decorating with kindred spirit Libby Cameron, Parish’s last apprentice, when they realized, in Cameron’s words, “…that everything had gotten too white and beige.”  In 2000, Susan and Libby teamed up to create Sister Parish Design, which offers fabric and wallpapers from Mrs. Parish’s archives and that of her venerable design firm Parish-Hadley. Susan and Libby’s goal was to resurrect the prints and colors that Sister loved. The resulting collection embodies the charm, warmth and flair of her signature style. From a tidy pattern of dots to a star spangled trellis design, Sister Parish Design fabrics and wallpapers carry on a tradition of the “Parish Hadley” style, of timeless patterns that represent an eclectic mix of materials-both traditional and modern.

ABOUT PROUST ON DESIGN | Answered by our design icons, these must-ask questions come from a 19th century parlor game made popular by Marcel Proust, the French novelist, essayist & critic. Proust believed the direct questions and honest responses that they elicited revealed the true nature of the individual. For this specific column, we have put a design related spin on the traditional questions. While this method of questioning has been used by many journalists throughout the years, we were primarily inspired by The Proust Questionnaire, which appears monthly on the back page of one of our all time favorite magazines, Vanity Fair (also Krista’s alma mater).

Proust on Design alumni include Anne Maxwell Foster & Suysel dePedro Cunningham of Tilton Fenwick | Madeline Weinrib | Todd Nickey & Amy Kehoe of Nickey Kehoe | Michelle Nussbaumer | Serena Dugan of Serena & Lily | John Robshaw | Mally Skok | Katie Leede | Peter Dunham | Seema Krish | Zak Profera | ZAK+FOX

Proust on Design: Tilton Fenwick

Proust on Design: Tilton Fenwick | CLOTH & KIND

what is your idea of perfect design happiness?
anne | THE ABILITY TO CHANNEL OUR CLIENTS’ HOPES AND DREAMS
TO A RESULT EVEN GREATER THAN THEY EVER IMAGINED.
suysel | SURROUNDING MYSELF WITH THINGS I HAVE COLLECTED
OR ACQUIRED THROUGHOUT MY LIFE.

what is your greatest fear in design?
anne | SAFETY.
suysel | FURNITURE NOT FITTING IN ELEVATORS! NYC REALITY!

which historical design figure do you most identify with?
anne | DOROTHY DRAPER.
suysel | MADELEINE CASTAING.
HER TIMELESS INTERIORS HAVE ALWAYS SPOKEN TO ME
AND HER RAYURE FLEURIE TOILE FABRIC
IS PROBABLY MY ALL-TIME FAVORITE (below).

Proust on Design: Tilton Fenwick | CLOTH & KIND, image via Martha Stewart

which living designer do you most admire?
anne | MILES REDD.
suysel | THE MAN WHO TRAINED AND MENTORED ME – MARKHAM ROBERTS.
I AM IN AWE OF HIS INNATE ABILITY TO LAYER PATTERNS AND MIX ANTIQUES
WITH MODERN PIECES SO EFFORTLESSLY.

what profession other than design would you like to attempt?
anne | GENEALOGIST.
suysel | I THINK I WOULD HAVE FOLLOWED IN MY FATHER’S FOOTSTEPS
AND GONE THE CRAZY COSTUME DESIGN ROUTE – LOVE SEQUINS AND RUFFLES!

what is your greatest design extravagance?
anne | SUYSEL, MY DESIGN PARTNER IS THE ULTIMATE LUXURY
WHEN MAKING DESIGN DECISIONS.
“AM I OUT OF MY MIND CRAZY OR DO YOU LOVE IT?”
suysel | CHRISTOPHER SPITZMILLER LAMPS.
THE COLORS ARE SO AMAZING AND THEY CAN TRANSFORM A ROOM (below).

Proust on Design: Tilton Fenwick | CLOTH & KIND, image via The New York Times

when and where were you happiest with your design?
anne | UPON SEEING HIS NEW APARTMENT COMPLETE FOR THE FIRST TIME,
THE 11 YEAR OLD SON OF A CLIENT SAID
“I WAS WORRIED. THIS WALLPAPER DECISION WAS BOLD,
BUT IT REALLY PAID OFF!”
suysel | SAME AS ANNE’S!

what do you consider your greatest achievement in design?
anne | STILL WORKING. WE’VE HAD LOTS OF MOMENTS OF PRIDE
SINCE WE OPENED OUR COMPANY IN 2010, BUT ALWAYS STRIVING FOR MORE.
suysel | WHEN WE ARE ABLE TO PUSH CLIENTS PAST THEIR COMFORT ZONE
AND THEY THANK US FOR DOING SO.

if you died and came back as another designer or design object,
who or what do you think it would be?
anne | I’D COME BACK AS ANY OBJECT FOR SALE AT ANTONY TODD.
I WOULD KNOW I WAS GOOD IN MY PAST LIFE TO BE SO EXQUISITE IN THIS ONE.
suysel | AN YVES KLEIN BLEUE TABLE – IT’S A SHOWSTOPPER!

what specific design related talent are you lacking that you would you most like to have?
anne | BEING ABLE TO BETTER VERBALIZE THE END RESULT OF DESIGN DECISIONS.
SOMETIMES “TRUST US” DOESN’T ALWAYS WORK!
suysel | WISH I COULD SEW CURTAINS!

Proust on Design: Tilton Fenwick | CLOTH & KIND, image from The New York Times

what is your most treasured design related possession?
anne | A JAMES ROSENQUIST SCREEN PRINT CALLED “FOR THE YOUNG ARTIST”
THAT HANGS IN MY SOON-TO-BE DAUGHTER’S NURSERY (above).
I CAN’T WAIT TO KNOW HER AND WHETHER SHE’LL BE A YOUNG ARTIST (LIKE ME),
OR INTERESTED IN SPORTS LIKE MY HUSBAND, OR BOTH OR NEITHER!
suysel | PAIR OF VINTAGE TESSELLATED HORN CHAIRS
IN THE STYLE OF FRANCES ELKINS, WITH HORSEHAIR SEATS (below).

Proust on Design: Tilton Fenwick | CLOTH & KIND, image courtesy of Tilton Fenwick

what do you regard as the lowest depths of misery in design?
anne | NEUTRAL AND STARK.
suysel | ROOMS WITHOUT ART, BOOKS AND ACCESSORIES.

Proust on Design: Tilton Fenwick | CLOTH & KIND, image courtesy of Tilton Fenwick

what curse word do you most frequently use?
anne | BUMMER.
suysel | IT’S IN SPANISH :)

what is your favorite design related word?
anne | ESCUTCHEON. HOW FUN TO PRONOUNCE?!
suysel | WALLPAPER!

what is your least favorite design related word?
anne | MATCHY-MATCHY.
suysel | TRANSITIONAL.

what turns you on in design?
anne | ANYTHING I HAVEN’T SEEN BEFORE.
suysel | UNEXPECTED WHIMSY.

what turns you off in design?
anne | ANYTHING TOO TRENDY.
suysel | ROOMS THAT AREN’T LAYERED.

what is your motto in design?
anne | UNDER THE RIGHT GUIDANCE, MORE IS MORE!
suysel | QUALITY IS REMEMBERED LONG AFTER THE PRICE IS FORGOTTEN.

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ABOUT TILTON FENWICKTilton Fenwick is a boutique interior design firm started by Anne Maxwell Foster and Suysel dePedro Cunningham in 2010. Built on a mutual appreciation for traditional aesthetic with a fresh perspective, the firm embraces the unexpected in both color and pattern while always infusing comfort.

IMAGE CREDITS | Images courtesy of Tilton Fenwick; the recent New York Times article covering the design firm, Colors To Make Dumbo Crush; Madeleine Castaing sketch via Martha Stewart as it appears in Deborah Needleman’s The Perfectly Imperfect Home.

ABOUT PROUST ON DESIGN | Answered by my design icons, these must-ask questions come from a 19th century parlor game made popular by Marcel Proust, the French novelist, essayist & critic. Proust believed the direct questions and honest responses that they elicited revealed the true nature of the individual. For the purpose of this column, I put a design related spin on the traditional questions.

While this method of questioning has been used by many journalists throughout the years, I was primarily inspired by The Proust Questionnaire, which appears monthly on the back page of Vanity Fair magazine (my alma mater).

Read the complete series of Proust on Design interviews with Madeline Weinrib, Todd Nickey & Amy Kehoe of Nickey Kehoe, Michelle Nussbaumer, Serena Dugan of Serena & Lily, John Robshaw, Mally Skok, Katie Leede, Peter Dunham, Seema Krish and Zak Profera of ZAK+FOX. If you would like to be considered for this column, please contact me at info(at)clothandkind(dot)com.

Proust on Design: Madeline Weinrib

what is your idea of perfect design happiness?
COPYRIGHT LAWS THAT PROTECT DESIGNERS
AND NOT BIG BUSINESS.

what is your greatest fear in design?
FEAR CAN LEAD TO BETTER DESIGN.

which historical design figure do you most identify with?
FORTUNY.

which living designer do you most admire?
JACK LENOR LARSEN. I ADMIRE HIM NOT ONLY FOR HIS WORK,
BUT ALSO FOR HIS SUPPORT OF OTHER DESIGNERS.
HIS COLLECTIONS ARE WONDERFUL AS WELL.

what profession other than design would you like to attempt?
COOKING.

what is your greatest design extravagance?
MY STUDIO – IT’S A BIG, LIGHT-FILLED SPACE
AND A PLEASURE TO WORK IN EVERY DAY.

when and where were you happiest with your design?
I’M VERY CRITICAL OF MY OWN WORK.
FROM CONCEPTION TO COMPLETION,
THE PROCESS CAN TAKE ONE TO TWO YEARS.
IT’S A HAPPY DAY WHEN I FEEL A DESIGN IS FINALLY FINISHED.

what do you consider your greatest achievement in design?
CAN YOU ASK ME THAT AGAIN IN ANOTHER 20 YEARS?

if you died and came back as another designer or design object,
who or what do you think it would be?
IRONICALLY, I WOULD NOT BE A RUG.
I DON’T LIKE TO LET PEOPLE WALK ALL OVER ME.

what specific design related talent are you lacking
that you would you most like to have?
THINKING IN SQUARE FOOTAGE.

what is your most treasured design related possession?
MY FORNASETTI CONSOLE.
I FOUND IT YEARS AGO IN A SECOND HAND SHOP.

what do you regard as the lowest depths of misery in design?
SEEING MY HANDMADE DESIGNS COPIED AND MASS PRODUCED.

what curse word do you most frequently use?
I USE THEM ALL.

what is your favorite design related word?
HARMONY.

what is your least favorite design related word?
KITSCH.

what turns you on in design?
AUTHENTICITY AND ORIGINALITY.

what turns you off in design?
KNOCKOFFS.

what is your motto in design?
KEEP IT SIMPLE.

IMAGE CREDITS | Lead image of Madeline provided by Madeline Weinrib & taken by photographer Jason Frank Rothenberg, Painting of Moroc wallpaper pattern, Moroc wallpaper,  Jack Lenor Larsen photograph, Larsen Retro fabric, Madeline’s studio image provided by Madeline Weinrib, Bedroom image provided by Madeline Weinrib & styled by Lili Diallo.

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