
Recent design school grad Freya Godwin-Brown clutches one of her resin and fabric sculptures after we chatted for thirty minutes about everything from her upcoming move to Australia to the skies of Shanghai which inspired this body of work.

Eleanor Young, textile designer, shows an exciting juxtaposition with her dainty vintage furniture pieces that she's upholstered with her bold asymmetric geometric patterns, creating something entirely feminine out of shapes ordinarily associated with masculinity or 80s pop 'topshop' style youth wear. What she's created here feels fresh and sophisticated at the same time. She also tries out digital printing for the first time as seen on the pillow on top of the small bench which worked really well with the embroidery. The way she matched her dress to her collection was also a nice touch.

Camilla Meijer is not a recent grad. I didn't even get a chance to stop and talk to her - but I love her patterns (see Abigail Borg, a rising star as well).

Eadadin Dempsey sits in her final project after she talked excitedly about her first show. Simple construction, nothing extraneous, inspired by thatched roofs in her native Ireland. She's a graduate from Dublin Institute of Technology.

Yura Kim from South Korea made these resin light fixtures by hand but don't ask her how she did it because she won't tell you. She said, "sorry, I took a long time to figure out how to do it." Fair enough and she's done a beautiful job. They are even more impressive in person. The one behind her in pink looks like a fragile shell or a birds nest.

These three women make up Rooms Design, an interior and product design company from Georgia (the country, not the state). Quite an interesting trio. The woman in the middle is the business side and the two women on the ends are the designers. They also worked in collaboration with a fashion designer who dressed chairs in military uniforms. This collection was a inspired by the recent Russian invasion and communist occupation of Georgia during the cold war. The fear is that 'things will become drab again if freedom is threatened'. The lamp in metal represents the Soviet Union and the wooden lamp is modeled after an American 50's desk lamp, a bold expression of designs potential to communicate political sentiments, something you might not expect from a commodity.

Holly Palmer creates whimsical furniture that doesn't overpower. I want that table and the teacup behind her. More Alice in Wonderland charming than boutique hotel showy, these struck me as great for small spaces.
Related posts:
- Women at work: Insights from Women on the Front Lines of Polish Design
- Tent London 2008 – London Design Festival
- What Women Bring to the Table – Designers, Artists, Thinkers, & Inventors to Start the Week
- What Priscilla said: A design world legend goes back to basics
- Taiwan: Red Dot Design Award Winner Breathes New (Plant) Life Into Chair Design





Aimee Louise
11 months ago
Great write up! Its really inspiring to see such a strong support for female designer, Thanks Chauncey.
Nata Janberidze
11 months ago
Exactly! Thank you Chauncey.
Nata Janberidze
11 months ago
Exactly! We love your work, Thank you Chauncey.
teena asatiani
9 months ago
political sentiments will be finally trained and only by the way it is said, bravo georgian girls!!!