Custom Mosaics Enjoy a Renaissance During Pandemic-spurred Home Design Boom

2022-06-10 18:52:43 By : Mr. Kyle Chan

In the post-pandemic world, where millions of erstwhile office workers are now telecommuting, beige is the enemy of joy.

The work-from-home reality has reoriented people around their homes (necessitating home offices, home gyms) and spurred homeowners to reassess design choices — often made by a faceless developer or previous owner. A shower wall or kitchen backsplash takes on more import when you’re looking at it all day, every day. And the mosaic — an ancient art form popularized during the Roman Empire — is experiencing something of a renaissance amid the pandemic-spurred home design boom.

Alan Faena: Alchemy and Creative Collaboration

Inside the Museum of Arts and Design's Punk Graphics Exhibit

Inside The Future Perfect's Casa Perfect Showroom

Before the great isolation, says Cean Irminger, a mosaicist and the creative director of Virginia-based mosaic company New Ravenna, resale potential was top-of-mind when customers chose mosaic tile.

“People went for beiges and neutrals. They didn’t want anything with too much personality because they’re thinking, I’m going to sell this house in a couple of years, I should do something that will appeal to the masses and just be happy with that.”

“Everybody’s realizing they’re going to be in their homes 365 days a year. They want it to be something that brings them joy,” she adds. “They are no longer designing for a future unknown person.”

Even before the pandemic, the minimalist aesthetic of the 2000s — which churned out so many white marble kitchens — was beginning to give way to color and creativity. “The whole 2000s it was white and gray, white and gray, maybe a little beige. But now it’s color, it’s warm tones, it’s things that catch the eye and have a lot of personality,” says Irminger. “People aren’t scared of color anymore.”

New Ravenna stocks more than 1,000 made-to-measure stone and glass mosaics. The recently released Biome collection includes patterns inspired by nature such as Gingko, Reptile, Sea Foam, Sassafras and Geode. Each pattern is available in multiple colorways. All are hand-cut stone; a blue Geode ($715 a square foot) is made with honed Thassos, polished Indigo, Orchid, Cornflower, Hydrangea, Aloe, Lotus, Periwinkle, Celeste, Carrara, Blue Macauba and Aurum.

“We consider Geode like a painting,” explains Irminger. “It does not have a pattern that repeats. Every time somebody orders the Geode, we’re going to give them their own, one-of-a-kind piece of art to fit their space.”

If the pandemic has inspired a reassessment of our interior spaces, for Irminger, more time at home also has animated her professional life. When the world went into lockdown in spring 2020, she found herself thrust into the role of teacher and playmate to her young daughters, then 7 and 9. Luckily they live on a 100-acre farm in Exmore, a tiny agrarian community on Virginia’s Eastern Shore peninsula where New Ravenna is headquartered. The outdoors became their classroom; there were “science walks” in the woods and plenty of space for messy crafts like tie-dye. Those experiences became the inspiration for Irminger’s newest collection of mosaics called Heyday. To Dye For evokes the burst of color and pattern of a tie-dyed shirt. There’s also Fire Fly and Phase to Phase, a geometric mosaic that mimics the phases of the moon.

Says Irminger: “For me, it was just a matter of how to translate that inspiration in a way that might be a little more sophisticated and less on the nose; to create something that can still enliven somebody’s living space with a jolt of childhood joy.”

New Ravenna ships about 16,000 square feet of mosaics each month and has seen sales of its made-to-measure mosaics spike 20 percent compared to the past three years. (Made-to-measure mosaics represent 70 percent of orders; New Ravenna also has a ready-to-ship line.) Irminger is among five in-house designers, while New Ravenna also regularly partners with guest designers including NewYork City-based interior designer Sasha Bikoff and architect and designer Caroline Beaupère, whose association with New Ravenna began several years ago when she worked with the company to create bespoke glass mosaics for her clients, including a meandering cherry blossom vine in the master bath of a Jersey City residence and a bird-and-vine motif for a kitchen backsplash in a small Kips Bay apartment.

“That is the silver lining of the pandemic — people are spending a lot of time in their homes and they want their homes to really reflect them, instead of simply living in a space and then maybe one day selling it,” says Beaupère, who is working on her second collection for New Ravenna.

Beaupère prefers to design with glass for its infinite color possibilities, from subtle pastels to the vivid jewel tones that have become more popular and that are not always achievable with natural stone. (Basalto, a common volcanic rock, can be glazed to achieve bright tones.)

Unlike wallpaper or paint or a piece of mass-produced furniture, mosaics are customizable and durable.

“That’s something that clients love,” says Beaupère. “A mosaic can bring life and energy into a space, it’s unique and something that no one else in the world has.”

New Ravenna has seen a pandemic-era spike in bespoke customization requests; from incorporating family names into a floor medallion to incorporating a customer’s local flora and fauna into one of the company’s Chinoiserie-esque patterns. Bird motifs are particularly popular at the moment and costumers are requesting very bold color changes to existing patterns.

But off-the-wall requests are also not uncommon. Irminger has designed several quirky bespoke mosaics, including a 5-foot-tall rabbit for the bottom of a pool, a portrait of a cat shaved to look like a lion and a silhouette portrait of a man and woman wearing nothing but cowboy hats. “It’s the greatest outdoor shower installation of all time,” she says.

Pantone's Spring-Summer 2020 Colors Led by Flame Scarlet

Sign up for WWD's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.

Click here to read the full article.

Today's beauty shopper demands greater personalization.

Gates advocated a global team of experts that would help all countries bolster their outbreak response and help them run drills.

With COVID-19 cases surging again, many people are wondering what the future of the global pandemic will look like in the United States. Amid the uncertainty, however, a recently authorized antiviral treatment and a new Moderna booster expected to arrive in the fall have experts suggesting there could be an end in sight.

After two-pandemic disrupted years Salone del Mobile and Milan Design Week are returning with their usual format this week, offering major opportunities to fashion brands.

The storied ceramic ornaments brand has more than cute porcelain puppets under its belt.

Identity verification service ID.me won dozens of government contracts during the pandemic. Staff described endless backlogs and lax security practices.

In a tough retail environment, trade shows are bringing the industry together this season to offer vital business solutions.

The brand’s founder Edgardo Osorio is bringing the Italian joie de vivre to the table with an expansive home collection to be unveiled at Milan Design Week.

The luxury line wants to pioneer a different, more forgiving idea of wellness at sea.

The collection was unveiled on Monday during Milan Design Week, reflecting on how technology and fashion can cooperate to create increasingly sustainable and efficient production solutions.

For the last two years, you had to get creative with your Father’s Day celebrations due to the pandemic, but with restrictions loosening up, you have the...

The pandemic has evolved and people are going out more, but the retail landscape is still very much a whirlwind.

Given recent financial struggles, when Americans aren’t abandoning carts, they’re tapping into BNPL for summer.

"how do I explain that, no, it's not a covid cough, I just don't know how to swallow my own spit"

Kelly Corrigan of "Tell Me More" became the voice helping many women through the pandemic - navigating family and finding inspiration in the good.

The comfy, all-year frock has a secret: It has pockets!

There is almost nothing this futuristic robot vacuum can't do — and it's marked down for a limited time.

The gay actor says creating safer spaces for queer youth has never been more important.

Identity theft is on the rise. Keep your info secure with LastPass.

Model Jane Seymour wowed her Instagram commenters by posing in a stylish bathing suit.