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Friday, September 11, 2009

The Latest Carpet Style Trends 2009

Chile Fashion Week grafica originally uploaded by kevinkobek.
Chile Fashion Week graficaHurray! After being on the lookout for several months, I've just come across information on the latest carpet style trends...

This from the August 31/September 7, 2009 issue of Floor Covering News in an article titled "Mills roll out new products for fall, discuss trends, looks." [Subscription required for full article.]

The latest news is primarily about color although Emily Morrow, Shaw's director of color, style and design states that "Hand-touched visuals are achieved in carpet through the use of striated yarns, creating the sun-faded, hand-knotted and time-worn visuals of the hand-knotted heirloom rugs from middle-eastern origins."

My interpretation: texture comes from visual effects.

Not too different from the kinds of effects that Robbie Schuette described in A Foot's Perspective About Fabrica's Silk Weave Carpet.

Specifically on the color front, Vickie Gilstrap, vice president of residential color and design with Mohawk, shared five key trends that new carpet styles will reflect:
  • Neutrals will bring security in a bold way.
  • Nature is a natural source for optimism.
  • Buying "American" takes on a new meaning.
  • Think royal.
  • In addition to local, there's more global.
Fun to think how those trends affect us right now... I'm totally into purple, and I'd say we're all more aware and appreciative of the uniqueness that local and global offer in counteracting the sea of sameness.

Emily Morrow says "the world of color, style and design has taken a turn toward 'comfortable, sensible sophistication' for 2009... Today's palette doesn't vary far from the 'natural neutrals' to 'dark, rich neutrals' with a few exceptions."

Furthermore, "gray, dark brown, tans, black and white are what we find most prevalent.... These are the most basic yet classic and elegant neutrals from which to choose as a beginning. The newest carpet styles are using these rich neutral colors, considered no-brainers but appropriately supported with a cast of other vibrant colors from the fashion/interior world, offering the consumer the choice of using 'color as pop' or 'color as canvas.'"

For more of Emily Morrow's thoughts about color, read this Floor Focus article on 2009 Color Trends that she and Kaye Gosline contributed to.

I'm eager to discover how all of this translates into actual carpet styles. I'll be attending [and presenting at] the upcoming Surfaces 2010 and hope to have specifics to share with you then.

In the meantime, how do you see these trends affecting you and your flooring decisions?



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Wednesday, September 10, 2008

A Foot's Perspective - Episode 12

This episode of A Foot's Perspective takes place in my Mom's dining room in Washington, DC, which features two different carpet styles.

She has taken a patterned carpet and inserted it within a textured carpet border. The effect is wonderful!

What my Mom created is something that Thom Filicia suggests in Thom Filicia's Design Inspiration Tips [although the solid texture style is not what my Mom has used in the rest of the house] and Vickie Gilstrap in The Latest in Carpet Style Trends.

This photo to the left shows you the diagonal trellis pattern and the solid textured border she chose. Isn't is fantastic?

What a way to create your own statement of style!

See for yourself how it looks. Let me know if it inspires you to try new things with carpet, especially given how many beautiful new carpet styles are now available....

[Subscribers, please click on this link to view the YouTube video clip.]



For the most recent episode from A Foot's Perspective - Episode 11.

Or you can scroll through previous blogposts with links to all previous episodes of A Foot's Perspective.





Friday, February 15, 2008

The Latest in Carpet Style Trends

While at Surfaces 2008 I experienced firsthand the carpet style trends that I've been reading about in the flooring trade press.

Trends such as "Beyond berber: Patterned carpet offers high fashion choices" by Janet Herlihy in the 10/1-8/2007 issue of Floor Covering Weekly or "Consumers influence design demands in 2008" by Amy Joyce Rush from the 01/21-28/2008 issue of Floor Covering Weekly or even Mohawk adds ‘stars’ to its 2008 lineup: Innovative styles ... [from the 01/18/2008 issue of Floor Covering News].

All exciting trends because they emphasize the stylish possibilities of carpet, and do so in the context of a consumer's home where hard surfaces will absolutely co-exist with soft surfaces. The combined end result can now be show-stoppingly glamourous, sophisticated and very comfortable.

[These two photos are of Horizon's Flamboyant. I love the textural quality of the product - both visually and to the touch. It's casual yet very stylish.]
Let me share some of the specifics from the articles...
The first article "Beyond berber..." discusses life beyond looped berber flecked carpet. That's the carpet that became so very popular across North American homes some years back. Usually made of olefin fiber, the loop construction and flecks of color forgave a whole slew of sins.

Unfortunately, it also 'uglied out' rather quickly - olefin, with its lower melting point, mats down, quickly losing its new crisp look and generally not performing as well as a comparable nylon product would.

The second article asserts that consumers are calling the design shots, and flooring suppliers are responding with "more diversity, luxury and color." Enter into a world where we as consumers are savvy about design, color and patterns, love the ideas available through HGTV, and want to bring greater sophistication and beauty to our homes as we express a greater sense of style.

No surprise, those berber loop styles just don't cut it anymore!

[And, by the way, berber refers not to the loop construction, but rather to the flecks of color in the carpet.]

[This photo below represents Gulistan's Craftwork. I love the pattern created by alternating a tight loop with a velvety cut pile texture.]
 
Add to that the many, beautiful hard surface options - from granite, marble, and travertine to exotic tiles from Italy and hand-scraped wood floors and everything else in between - and you realize that it's high time that we have the opportunity to be tantalized with deliciously comparable carpet choices that exude as much fashion as our other options do....

Don't you agree? Our carpet selections can be as sassy as we want to be in one room, or as sophisticated as we need to be in another. The options are there! It's all up to us!

[This photo captures WundaWeve's Sisal Chic. Every time I look at and touch this carpet style, I'm reminded of a favorite handknit sweater - knubby, classy, comfortable and totally uplifting. I want to wear it.]

That boring ubiquitous berber loop can finally be ditched in favor of a fun, fresh-looking and better performing cut-pile construction. Not only does it have the berber flecks of color, but also unusual effects in how the carpet yarns get combined.

Patterned carpet now captures subtle designs that emulate hard surface swirls, patterns and striations. The pattern can come from combining loops and textures, or using different tones of similar color, or combining yarns of different thickness in one carpet, or even different luster levels in a same carpet. The end result is quite magical and definitely sensual: you can't help but feel it with your hands to better understand what your eyes tell you.

Did you read Marianne's post about Fabrica's Silk Weave and The Elegance of Dupioni Silk? I love that carpet can capture the look and feel of luxurious silk! Check out this post by Daily Danny titled Floored by Carpets in which he includes terrific photos of carpets that similarly convey both stylishness and exotic sensibilities.

Imagine having a swirly granite floor in a foyer area paired with a dreamy counterpoint swirl in carpet for the living room space off that foyer... It works for me.

From a practical design perspective, if you want to combine hard and soft surface in an open space, consider using inlays of carpet in the hard surface - as Vickie Gilstrap explains in the article - or even bind the broadloom carpet and create an area rug.

[This swirly pattern from WundaWeve's Shining Allure comes alive when you look at the carpet from the ground. I consider it more formal than Sisal Chic, but it belongs to the same classy, comforting family.]

If you are considering combining different carpet patterns and textures in a space, consider an inlay of pattern in a less exuberant carpet, one that carries through the whole space. That will help to unify the whole look as Thom Filicia explains.

Have you noticed, too, the richness of color that the new hard surface options offer? What I love about that is that it forces going beyond beige [yeah for color!], and says that it's absolutely okay to mix and match surface types, patterns, colors and looks throughout the house, customizing for each room. All rooms don't have to be hard. Some can and should be soft and comfortable, while still expressing a sense of uniquely individual style!
That, to me, is the ultimate luxury.

NOTE: All of the products shown above - except for the room scene of my hotel room - feature new introductions from Surfaces made with Wear-Dated and Wear-Dated Natural Nylon carpet fiber.


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Thursday, January 3, 2008

Fashion Trends: Color-Emotion from Mohawk

I am mad for color.

And, I love information that puts into perspective the various social, economic, cultural and fashion trends swirling around us.

For that reason, I was delighted when Vickie Gilstrap, Vice President, Residential Color and Design for Mohawk and Karastan Woven Product Development, and her team -- Nathan Hammett, Lauren Campbell, Luanne Holloway, Rebecca Frazee, Cliff Lyles, Susie Bell, Katherine Bugsch, and Michael Thompson -- shared with us their 2007 color presentation titled "Color-Emotion."

Here is the backdrop for the presentation:

"The American Consumer is made up of different genders, age groups, and cultural backgrounds.

We all agree that color selection is very important. You can make a statement with color; you'll get a reaction to color. But, color is a very personal choice because emotion comes into play. Different people are going to see, appreciate and accept color in different ways."

I bet color matters to you.

Experience the full Color-Emotion presentation, then, by visiting these links on Flooring The Consumer:

+ Color-Emotion From Mohawk - Part I
+ Part II - White
+ Part III - Going For Baroque
+ Part IV - Desert Neutrals
+ Part V - Eco-Chic/Eco-Elegance

And, then, let us know what you think. Is there a trend that really resonates with you? Which is your favorite color?


By the way, you can also learn more about how Mohawk gets perspective on which carpet colors and patterns are popular around the country in Flooring Inspiration From Mohawk.


Disclaimer: Mohawk and Karastan are Wear-Dated's customers.

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