3/26/2023 0 Comments Checkmate magazinesIf you used the same number of shades in a print it would look riotous but with a tartan it’s much more rigid. It can take a lot of colour but in an ordered way and this makes it an easy pattern to use on floors. Tartan is famous for its balance and colour harmony. Soon the pile was trimmed and cut pile carpet was developed as it was found that wool cross cut and presented on its end was still harder wearing.” Later in the 18th century the technique of weaving wool as a loop into jute backing, sometimes known as Brussels weave, was developed to make a thicker carpet using less raw material. As there is little more than a kilo of useable wool taken from a mature sheep each year it is certainly extravagant. “Originally carpet was woven in this way as a flat weave, using a great deal of raw material, almost 2 kilos per metre. Introduce a twill weave, a diagonal rib from bottom right to top left which can be suddenly reversed by introducing a change in direction to form a herringbone, and the colour is far from flat.” The blue and yellow fibres mixed together create the green, the black and white fibres are present to play the light – the black absorbs it and the white reflects it. Lovat green, typically used as camouflage, is a mixture yarn, made up of bright turquoise blue, strong yellow, black and white. As with all good design Annie says: “there is practical purpose to the application of twill weave to carpets and this is because it makes it more hardwearing.” For carpet cloth ANTA stick to a twill weave, sometimes introducing a herring-bone and the three-ply yarn twisted together to make it as durable as possible. Tartan is a most abiding and adaptable of cloths. The colour of the Scottish landscape changes hourly as well as seasonally. The light alters with the fast changing weather, and in the north lingers almost all night in summer. It is the rain that makes the difference to the living landscape, the vegetation, the rivers and lochs. Similar to gardening and influenced by nature, the desire to create order or mimic nature in some small way preoccupies me.” In a country full of contrast the Highland landscape is breathtakingly beautiful and shockingly harsh. “Colour balanced by proportion is my objective as a designer. Owner Annie Stewart’s designs sometimes employ wild colour combinations, yet retain a natural Scottish twist of sobriety. A tartan makes a striking stair carpet and a tartan carpet injects a sense of drama into a room. It has also made traditional flat woven wool carpet and rugs for thirty years. Alternative Flooring follows her edict and mixes its wool tartan Fling and Dotty runners.ĪNTA, the highland-based company, creates tartans based on traditional setts for both fashion and interiors. Wendy Dagworthy, the esteemed former professor at the Royal College of Art reminds us that tartan needs to be worn in a modern way and, she says, works best “if mixed with other things like a flower or stripe tartan works.” It’s an approach found in interiors too. It has now found a home as flooring and it’s invigorating to see how fresh it looks. Tartan is a timeless Scottish cloth with inexhaustible potential. Tartan demonstrates the cyclical nature of trends, drawing on the classics and reinventing them for a modern age or new context. This infatuation is recurrent rather than revolutionary and this enduring textile enjoys regular revivals and never really goes away. Vivienne Westwood, the original alchemist who turned prim to punk, and imbued this cloth with a sense of rebellion, continues to declare her love for tartan. It’s like a leaf waiting to turn into a blaze of colour. Tartan sets the tone of the catwalks each autumn season. As ANTA and others prove, there’s no endgame in sight for tartan.
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