PaperCity Magazine

March 2020- Fort Worth

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ART + DECORATION 68 T wo of America's greatest family-owned heritage textile companies have come together to create a very chic collaboration. Ninety-year-old luxury linen brand Matouk and 130-year-old design house Schumacher launch a collection of bed linens and beach towels this month, through the creative direction of Mindy Matouk and Dara Caponigro, Schumacher's creative director. We particularly love the Pomegranate print, based on an 18th-century design from the Schumacher archives. The botanical is reimagined in three vibrant colorways, printed in Italy on 500-thread-count Luca percale and finished with subtle E nglish paint company Farrow & Ball has launched a new palette of 16 colors in collaboration with design studio Roman and Williams and the Natural History Museum in London. Roman and Williams founders Robin Standefer and Stephen Alesch, along with Charlotte Cosby, head of creative at Farrow & Ball, delved into the museum's rare-book library, where they stumbled upon Werner's Nomenclature of Colours, the groundbreaking classification of color used by Charles Darwin that carefully details the exact hues and corresponding parts of animals, vegetables, and minerals of the natural world. A new Farrow & Ball color palette was born, dubbed Colour by Nature, guided by Standefer and Alesch's belief that nature never goes out of style. The duo created an intriguing installation in the Roman and Williams Guild shop in New York to celebrate the collection, with Dutch glass-and- wood cabinets stocked with bronze bird sculptures and 19th-century botanical models. Farrow & Ball Colour by Nature at Modern Maison, 1301 Hurley Ave., modernmaisoninteriors.com; farrow-ball. com. Anne Lee Phillips Scallop and white tape, a mark of Matouk craftsmanship. To order at Casa di Lino, Linen Boutique, fschumacher.com, matouk.com. Anne Lee Phillips B illy Cotton's name is on everyone's lips these days. The Brooklyn interior designer's elegant Regency- meets-Bauhaus aesthetic is all the rage with artists and collectors, including photographer Cindy Sherman, who recently enlisted him to design her Manhattan and East Hampton homes. In October, the design world buzzed when Cotton was tapped as Ralph Lauren Home's new creative director — then buzzed again when Cotton announced the closing of his design firm (to work full-rime at Ralph Lauren) and archiving of his furniture and lighting designs. But, Cotton fans, take heart: The designer has collaborated with Scott Group Studio on a new collection of rugs. Among the six styles, we're smitten with Cotton's interpretations of the classic English Hibiscus rug, which pays homage to the work of legendary English design duo Sibyl Colefax and John Fowler, and references the gardens at Brookby Mansion in Grand Rapids, Michigan, where the rugs are made. His Tortoise Shell pattern, destined to be the favorite new animal print underfoot, is created in the authentic tones and shapes of English tortoise-inlay furniture and accessories. Billy Cotton for Scott Group Studio, Dallas Design Center, 1025 N. Stemmons Freeway, Suite 751, scottgroupstudio.com. Rebecca Sherman A COLOR STORY OF ANIMAL, VEGETABLE, AND MINERAL ADRIAN GAUT ADRIAN GAUT BILLY COTTON, UNDERFOOT MATOUK x SCHUMACHER Billy Cotton for Scott Group Studio Tortoise Shell rug Farrow & Ball Colour by Nature installation at Roman and Williams Guild Matouk Pomegranate print Attleboro and Pomegranate prints Stephen Alesch, Robin Standefer, Roman and Williams English Hibiscus rug

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