Susan Connor’s exquisite collection of textiles and homewares come from experimenting with different printmaking techniques.
Couldn’t resist posting some fabulous updated designs from VOZ, all hand woven in Chile with Mapuche artisans.
Celine Cannon’s weaving is raw, refined, and deeply textural, wraps and throws incorporate a wide variety of yarn gauges from super fine, delicate, airy and even gauzy, to oversized wooly inserts of raw fleece.
Celine Cannon’s free form ethereal wraps and throws are a response to the environment and her relationship with people, places and things.
Jewelry designer and anthropologist Ana Srdic produces bold unique pieces of wearable art from old world techniques combined with semi precious materials.
Norlha produces luxury accessories and home products from Yak fiber in Tibet.
These traditional Tuareg earrings are made by the Koumama family collective from Agadez Niger from pure silver and colored glass.
Zarif Design is based in Kabul Afghanistan, where they employ and train 52 local Afghan men and women to practice handcrafted work.
Katie Jones spends as much as eighty hours working on a single jacket, Jones pieces together upcycled leather and denim to produce labor intensive, highly crafted fantasies of color.
Claire Wellesley-Smith is a textile artist, educator and writer based in Bradford, West Yorkshire.
Indian designer Aneeth Arora for Pero creates a modern interpretation of local dress styles from the remotest parts of India.
Tucker Robbins fell in love with Guatemalan craftsmanship, starting by importing furniture and textiles, and continuing onto developing a full range of accessories featuring the unique skills and traditions of the area.