Boom
Woollen and sustainable. The Bodo Sperlein edition for nya nordiska is rounded off by Boom, an innovative upholstery fabric that can also serve as a heavy drapery. The print design on recycled wool combines the look and feel of its natural material with a sense of sustainability. Combined with a synthetic fibre component, this drapery and upholstery fabric boasts exceptional durability. Its graphic design corresponds to that of Blitz and can be made up without pattern repeats.
Inspiring products
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Bristol
€0,00An elegant master of upholstery. This two-tone woven made of 100% wool is a tailor-made fit for furnishings in every sense. 50,000 abrasion rubs qualify Bristol for demanding everyday use for armchairs, sofas or upholstered beds. Its natural fibres make for a healthy indoor climate by regulating humidity. Given this woollen fabric is non-directional it is easy to make up. 13 contemporary colour tones are given additional finesse thanks to variations with a contrasting warp and weft.
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Rune
€0,00Dual benefit. Double-face fabric Rune lends itself to both double-face and universal applications. Its small-format all-over pattern exudes a natural surface texture with 3D properties thanks to a finely nuanced colour scheme. The pattern features in either soft non-colours or strong tones on a natural-coloured background. Thanks to its fibre mix with a high wool admixture this fabric is irresistible to the touch and despite its cosy feel it also convincingly delivers as cushion cover or upholstery fabric thanks to its 60,000 Martindale rubs.
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Blitz
€0,00A flash of textile brilliance. In the same fabric quality as Blast, Bodo Sperlein’s Blitz also displays cubic forms strung together like collages to form an all-over pattern. The jagged shape of its blitz-like lightening radiates sheer energy looking almost like stylised graffiti. Its two colours in three soft colour combinations give the sizable jacquard made of fine-threaded cotton an optical presence without overemphasising the pattern.
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Blast
€0,00The elementary art of interiors. This expressive, large-format design care of Bodo Sperlein has its creative roots in Vorticism, a specifically English contribution to Modernism. Parallel to Cubism, this art form emerged in the early 20th century. Bodo Sperlein has now reinterpreted it for our millennium. As a generous jacquard pattern on a very fine thread cotton base, Blast’s Vorticist Cubist motif reveals its graphic effect in situ convincing us as a flambuoyant eyecatcher.