
Laura Aviva Works With Colombian Weavers for Werregue Lighting Collection
Eight years ago, creative director Laura Aviva noticed the baskets in a friend’s home in Colombia. “Their heft, circular weave, and silky, shiny fiber made them unlike any I’d ever seen,” she remembers. The water-tight baskets were woven by the Wounaan, an indigenous group from the country’s Pacific Coast, and made of werregue, a native palm fiber. Aviva set out to work with the Wounaan on a lighting collection for her New York design studio. The result is Werregue, 22 one-of-a-kind black-and-white pendants with fiber shades made by hand in Colombia. Fitted with brass hardware, each piece takes over a month to create and incorporates traditional designs. “The bold, graphic patterning provides a mirror into the world of the weaver,” Aviva says.





more
Products
Chet Lo Teams Up With Rankin Editions On Futuristic Furnishings
Explore how the mashup of androgynous beauty and technorealism packs a powerful punch in Chet Lo and Rankin Editions’ sinuous furniture collection.
Products
8 Designers Making Waves In The World Of Bath Design
From sleek stone slabs to an amorphous birch mirror, see how these trailblazing designers are shaking up the bath and spa scene with style.
Products
Glimpse A Star-Studded Rug Collab With A Twist
Plumaria is an artfully shaped rug weaving a vibrant mélange of feathers, the brainchild of Illulian, Daniel Germani, and Maison Février.