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- Tea towels (pair) : Wheat & Tachibana
Tea towels (pair) : Wheat & Tachibana
Tea towels (pair) : Wheat & Tachibana
Pair of tea towels decorated with two of my favourite patterns from my Year in Pattern series.
No.24 : The time for wheat (May 31 – Jun 04)
No.60 : The tachibana first turns yellow (Dec 02 – Dec 06)
A pair of 70 x 50cm cotton-linen tea towels with hanging loops, made in the UK.
Machine wash at 30°C.
Pair of tea towels decorated with two of my favourite patterns from my Year in Pattern series.
No.24 : The time for wheat (May 31 – Jun 04)
No.60 : The tachibana first turns yellow (Dec 02 – Dec 06)
A pair of 70 x 50cm cotton-linen tea towels with hanging loops, made in the UK.
Machine wash at 30°C.
One day I read about a historical system of Japanese seasons. This system divides each of the four main seasons into six (called sekki). Each sekki is further split into three microseasons (called kō). That’s a whopping 72 seasons per year. The microseasons (each only a few days long) have fabulous names based on nature observations. I had a lightbulb moment: the name of each microseason could be the perfect prompt for a new pattern.
What about colours though? After weeks of research I found a tiny book, originally published in the 1930s, detailing 72 colour palettes inspired by seasonal images of Japan. The forward says “We hope that this book will bring color to its reader’s daily life, and prove useful in all kinds of creative situations.” Bingo!
72 kō + 72 palettes = 72 design briefs.
So that’s what I have been working on: a year in pattern. It’s been an amazing challenge, the subjects and colours often pushing me well outside my comfort zone (‘The springwater holds warmth’ in shades of beige and mauve? It’s ended up being one of my favourites!)
I have combined pairs of my favourite patterns to create these beautiful kitchen linens. The patterns are big, bold and crisp, and there are four sets to collect!