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Panoramic shot showing
the new interior
Its location – on Amwell Street – was all-important. ‘It’s what I call a “Mr Benn street”, like an old village, with its butchers, dairy and other small, independent traders. It’s the opposite of the homogenised, global high street,’ he adds.
What Simmons is implying is that its fabric, wallpapers and rug
designs, which ‘are hand-made and increasingly bespoke’ are better
appreciated on a street chock-full of stylish, independent shops like
this one. ‘People are becoming more and more sophisticated and asking
us for one-off designs,’ the Beasties explain. Textile designer Wallace
Sewell has a shop here and Twentytwentyone has a store on adjoining
River Street.
Timorous Beasties' designs
displayed in the showroom
At first, the new shop, all white and gallery-like, seems clinical, although there are witty touches: a trestle table for wallpapering is used as the main table in the basement. But the pristine interior makes sense – Timorous Beasties’ sumptuously colourful, broadstroke, large-scale designs cry out for a calm, neutral backdrop. The papers and fabrics – including the iconic Glasgow Toile (a satirical twist on an 18th-century toile de Jouy with its scenes of junkies and winos in Glasgow’s working-class Firhill area) and Devil Damask Lace (made of high quality lace, is a chic and challenging take on net curtains) – hang like banners from the ceiling. ‘We don’t agree with showing fabrics and wallpapers in a sample book. It doesn’t give you an idea of anything. Plus, a lot of our designs are to do with scale,’ says Simmons.
A trestle table is used to good
effect in the basement
This proves to be something of an understatement when McAuley
goes into more detail. ‘We’re wrapping one side of a shopping centre by
the M74 motorway near Glasgow with one of our designs,’ says McAuley.
‘We’re also providing wallpapers for BBC Scotland’s new offices in
Glasgow, and huge blinds and fabrics for the Premier Lounge for
Eurostar customers at the new St Pancras International station in
London [which opens in November].’
Tiromous Beasties' Tree of
Life fabric design, in 'ice'
Their next venture? It is to go almost microscopically small. ‘We’re learning how to copperplate-engrave our designs with a view to printing these on fabrics,’ says Simmons. ‘The line you get is more precise than when you work digitally – and you get a much more subtle range of tones. Only three people in the UK know how to do this, so it’s a vanishing skill.’
Tree of Life fabric, in 'raspberry'