The Blocks and Grid are the first of the upholstery textile products to come out of a new collaboration between Scholten & Baijings and the Maharam Design Studio.

Founded in Amsterdam in 2000 by Stefan Scholten and Carole Baijings, Scholten & Baijings, Studio for Design is known for their range of interior products characterised by minimal forms, and enhanced by simple geometric patterning and an acute sense of colour.

Scholten & Baijings explored modern approaches to colour blocking in response to Maharam’s open brief for a new upholstery textile design. They decided to develop two large-scale compositions based on the ten yards typically required to upholster a sofa, resulting in the Blocks and Grid, both of which have massive 27.5’ repeats.

Throughout the development process, Scholten & Baijings assessed the efficacy of their designs on numerous scale models. Stefan Scholten explained that it was challenging because they had to make sure a nine-metre piece of fabric that showed the whole repeat had to be just as interesting as a single metre of fabric. The Blocks and Grid patterns were designed to combine seamlessly, enabling the creation of a new visual effect with each application.

While Blocks features subtle colours lightly juxtaposed or overlapped to create effects of depth and transparency, Grid explores colour densities built up by parallel and perpendicular lines.

Blocks and Grid debuted in 2013 at London’s Victoria & Albert Museum as part of ‘The Dinner Party’ and at the Art Institute of Chicago’s exhibition, ‘3 in 1: Contemporary Explorations in Architecture and Design’, and will feature in an installation of Scholten & Baijings’s work this summer at the Villa Noailles in Hyères, France. Both textiles have been accepted into the permanent collection of the Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum.

Scholten & Baijings will also be presenting a third textile, Tones at NeoCon 2014. To be introduced by Maharam in Spring 2015, Tones continues Scholten & Baijings’s exploration of colour at a reduced scale, combining two distinct hues in different shades and tints, rendered by various weave structures as panes of chromatic gradation.

Maharam offers a comprehensive collection of textiles for commercial and residential interiors.