Textile Artist
- Lu Underwood
- Hertfordshire, United Kingdom
- Sustainable Design - Upcycled and Sustainable Textiles used in Furniture
Tuesday, 12 February 2013
Sunday, 10 June 2012
Degree Show over.
My final pieces. By upcycling textiles and the re-use of things,
these seats represent three aspects of sustainability.
'Where do you sit?'
'Economy' Wine bar stool
'Ecology' Rocker
Made of hemp scraps, shirts, cushions, and a door,
this seat was designed in collaboration with Bob Underwood.
It looks at the balance in nature.
My final pieces. By upcycling textiles and the re-use of things,
these seats represent three aspects of sustainability.
'Where do you sit?'
'Economy' Wine bar stool
Made of pin stripe suiting fabric it evokes a dripping oil pool,
the oil being a natural resource used as currency.
'Ecology' Rocker
Made of hemp scraps, shirts, cushions, and a door,
this seat was designed in collaboration with Bob Underwood.
It looks at the balance in nature.
'Social and Cultural' seat
Made of all sorts of recycled textiles and a garden post,
these seats look at the harmonizing of our cultural ways,
through hand stitched pattern and the Yinyang shape.
Monday, 7 May 2012
Friday, 20 April 2012
Sally!
These were past onto me by Sarah, or Sally as she was known. She has since past on but was 102 when she died and somehow this photo says a lot about her. She was in service in the 1920's and had a love of all things domestic...monday was wash day, friday they had fish, sunday she baked bread buns in the morning then cooked the roast. She kept newspaper cuttings of the latest this or that and then past them onto my sister or me. I always felt like one of the little spoons, dwarfed in her presence but I think it was through her I developed my thrift and kept things with a view to re-use.
My drawing of Sally and her 'just get on with it' attitude wallpapering. The photograph is of her leaving the hospital after breaking her spine and being prostrate for a year!
Through a love of re-inventing things and inspired by Slow Design philosophy, my work explores material sustainability and incorporates the re-use of things. Using a contemporary take on ancient Japanese techniques (boro, sashiko and sakiori) the colour, texture and narrative of my current pieces are inspired by the three aspects of sustainability:
Time
Logans Rock, Cornwall - one of my favorite places.
In our fast world, ideas of reflection and taking time become lost. Our cultural desire for immediacy disconnects us from the natural world and so too it’s lessons of regenerative design.
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