Drawing Natural Patterns: The Nonwovens by Sylvia Döhler

The winter snow feels serene if we look around us, but the home should use this concept as it’s drawing board. Sylvia Döhler creates four different designs in her Nonwovens Collection with limitless interior potential. As she states on her website about her nature-inspired textile collection, “It employs a purisitc fusion of shapes and patterns for to conquer urban living areas as a piece of modern decoration.”

Pinus Nigra-Pineta. Designed by by Sylvia Döhler.

The Nature-Inspired Nonwoven Materials by Sylvia Döhler Conquer Urban Living Areas

Using various materials that use special patterning, processing, and structuring, it’s evident that Döhler is looking to capture the realistic feel of nature using methods different from normal, woven fabrics. Some of the materials appear stitched on top of the fabric, like the Pinus Nigra-Pineta or Xerophyllum Tenax which appear to be tiny twigs and blades of grass under a fresh sheet of snow. Then there are are leaf-inspired, autumnal designs that ever so slightly resemble two different kinds of leaves. The Lunaria Annua looks like leaves floating on a pond, while the Acer Plantanoides looks like the forest bed in November. No matter which collection you choose, the tactile feel and appearance is present in the natural materials dye used in the Nonwovens collection.

Drawing Natural Patterns: The Nonwovens by Sylvia Döhler

Acer Plantanoides. Designed by by Sylvia Döhler.

Drawing Natural Patterns: The Nonwovens by Sylvia Döhler

Lunaria Annua. Designed by by Sylvia Döhler.

All of these patterns are manufactured individually also, to ensure they are up to quality standards. Also, they’re available in limited patch productions and can be created in the size you need for your project.

Döhler’s beautiful collection is constantly being reinvented since she believes that the boundaries of our home’s interior design and natural, outdoor landscape design are not divided at all, saying “nonwovens are fabrics whose shapes and colours root in the spontaneity of nature.

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