NY Design Week: Ode to Kvadrat’s Hallingdal 65

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It’s not surprising that the most refined and spare presentation I’ve seen at NY Design Week so far took place at the Jil Sander store in Soho, where Kvadrat celebrated one of its best-selling fabrics, Hallingdal 65, by inviting over thirty young designers to use it in new works. Since Hallingdal was designed by Nanna Ditzel in 1965 , it’s become famous for its durability and rich color palette. It’s been used in homes, hospitals and schools, but it’s never been used for more artful purposes until this show for NY Design Week, at least not on this public scale.

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Jonah Takagi‘s vintage camping gear-inspired Basecamp (above) that got such a positive response when it was shown in Milan was placed front and center. Around the corner was Stephen BurksPlay, a set of wooden room dividers covered in bright shades of Hallingdal 65. The dividers are joined by a zipper, allowing you to attach as many panels as you want to suit your space.

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On the other side of Burks’ dividers was the largest piece, Jonathan OlivaresChaise for Hallingdal 65, which asks “What if a piece of fabric wanted to relax?” Surely, if any fabric deserves a break from all its hard work over the past 45 years it’s Hallingdal 65. “Since fabric is normally used to upholster furniture designed for humans, Olivares thought it would be a fitting gesture to instead make a piece of furniture designed only to hold a piece of fabric.” By setting up a roll of yellow Hallingdal 65 on aluminum castings and letting it roll out and drape naturally, Olivares invites the fabric to “stretch out, and maybe…relax.”

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