Materials Trend Concepts A W 21 22
Materials Trend Concepts A W 21 22
Materials Trend Concepts A W 21 22
A/W 21/22
Materials
S t ud io Dr if t
Introduction
A focus on the climate crisis will drive seismic
transformation in the design industry in A/W 21/22, and as
the impact of materials comes under greater scrutiny,
designers and suppliers will be shifting research and
development into circular systems.
Investigative research in fields as diverse as bioscience,
permaculture, waste streams and digitisation are triggering
experimental eco-friendly prototypes across kitchens, labs,
studios and workshops, but a transition from speculative
future concepts to scaleable manufacturing will only be
possible through collaboration and concrete investment.
Aesthetics will move away from the purely frivolous as
science-based sustainability goals impose 'beautiful
restraints' on the creative process, from the raw resource and
processing to the impact of end-of-life de-materialisation.
From a design outlook, materials made in nature will be key,
from cultivated, compostable 'living' materials to natural,
raw, and even brute pre-futuristic textures. Tapping into a
fascination for all things unsettling, we will see visceral,
ephemeral, and horror-inspired textures challenge
perceptions of taste, value and beauty. Haptic products will
also indulge principles of pleasure and intimacy, and creative
customisation will shape waste materials into ad-hoc,
modular and playful products, designed to spark joy and
positivity in times of uncertainty and perpetual change.
Gaspar d Graulich
Cooking Up
Materials
Flo o r S krabanja
Z hekai Z hang
By Walid
Léa Munsch
The concept: Make products with baked-in narratives that link craft back to locality
by digging up soil and ash, firing clay, and taking inspiration from where we tread.
Surface & materials: Earthy materials are reshaped with craft and tech. Cindy Valdez
mixes clay with biomaterial for her interlocking via 3D-printed forms. Colour reveals
a sense of place. Atelier NL's project on street paving, for example, shows a rich soil
diversity via the pigments from each locale, and Stone Island's outerwear has a richly
pigmented look.
How to implement: Source local, richly toned natural materials and textiles, and
develop low-impact prints, textures and glazes with authentic earthy surfaces.
Relevant for: accessories, apparel, footwear, packaging, product design, interiors
S t o ne Island Mat er io
Living Design
Blast S t ud io
Bo m N o h
S hahar Livne
The concept: Engineer materials to appear raw and excavated, shining a light on the
pressures mining puts on the earth's resources, inspired by pre-futuristic aesthetics.
Surface & materials: Metal, marble and stone offcuts and even plastics shape this
brute aesthetic. The recycled silver jewellery of Queen’s Wood Studio has a frost-
bitten quality, similar to the hefty presence of Benjamin Motoc's furniture, which is
created through water and wax casting. Shahar Livne's Anthropocenic pieces
speculate on a future where plastic can only be mined.
How to implement: Create rawness via casting and chiselling for responsibly sourced
stone, marble, wood and oxidised metals, emulated also in textile construction.
Relevant for: apparel, accessories, textiles, packaging, product design, interiors
H igh S no biet y Q ueen's Wo o d S t ud io
Natural Radiance
@no o rayau
n l kav
The concept: Fear feeds into a fascination for all things unsettling, with
material textiles inviting reactions from fascination to horror.
Surface & materials: Take cues from bodily textures to create surfaces
with a visceral and strange presence. Clemence Grouin-Rigaux uses
waste from the animal slaughter industry for her slick furniture, which
calls to mind congealed blood. Iron oxide-dotted bloodstone quartz
inspires mineral composites and jewellery stones.
How to implement: Take inspiration from the urushi lacquerwork pieces
by Japanese master Genta Ishizuka. For textiles, leather and ceramics,
use low-impact glazes, lacquers and plastic-free coatings.
Relevant for: apparel, beauty, accessories, footwear, textiles, packaging,
product design, interiors, architecture
H elen Clair Gent a Ishizuka
Luxuriant Texture
S t ud io Fo am S t o f t S t ud io
The concept: Creating intimacy through tactile engagement is the focus of this story,
which embraces pleasure through products with luxurious, skin-like materials.
Surface & materials: Build softness into shape and surface. Look at Studiofoam's
Carnation vessels with draped, velvety, petal-like collars in a new leather and
porcelain material, echoed by Sebastian Brajkovic’s sumptuous French furniture in
sinuous, lifelike forms. Also look at Marija Puipaitė's ergonomic accessories
collection, which is designed to connect with the shape of the wearer.
How to implement: Build indulgence into responsibly sourced or vegan-equivalent
leather and suede, velvet, warm-touch ceramics and composites, and milky glass.
Relevant for: apparel, accessories, textiles, packaging, product design, interiors
Laine + Alliage H ild a H ellst r ö m
Conscious Colour
N ike
RE N S S eo k-H yeo n Yo o n
Clara Le Gr elle
Rive Ro shan
Pr ecio us Plast ic
Chr is Wo lst o n
The concept: Creative problem-solving will take remaking to a new level, reinventing
products through human-hacked technology and waste-stream materials.
Surface & materials: Benjamin Benmoyal weaves defunct VHS cassettes to create
disco-like textiles. Give digital products a human intervention, as seen with Daan
Veerman, who overrides his 3D printer manually to allow freeform outcomes, or
Stefano Santili who overloads digitally-rendered wood vessels with paint.
How to implement: Focus on sustainability. Take inspiration from Alicia Rowbotham’s
Waste Not Want Not project, which turns factory offcuts into accessory trims, and
Chris Wolston's table lamp, which features surplus melted plastic beads.
Relevant for: apparel, accessories, textiles, packaging, product design, interiors
Benjamin Benmo yal Juli Bo laño s-Dur man
Reclaiming Junk
Q iang H uang
Levan Maisurad ze and
Alicia Ro wbo t ham T ina S habur ishvili. Lucas Muno z
FUTURE DRIVERS
Annual
November 2019
FUTURE INNOVATIONS
November 2019 Annual
will shape 2022, and Seasonal S/S 22:
January 2020
TREND CONCEPTS
strategies for success Apr 2020 – Aug 2020
The 12 areas of
BIG IDEAS
innovation that will lead Future Drivers and
transformation across Future Innovations Trend Concepts present
industries in 2022, and contextualised for the the seasonal design
their implications for Fashion, Beauty, and directions for each
FUTURE CONSUMER
The Fear Factor Climate Urgency Degrowth for Good Balancing Age Mass to Micro Global Power Shift Migratory Patterns
Digital Identities Digital Identities The Pleasure Digital Identities Made in Nature
The Pleasure Principle The Pleasure Principle Principle
The Tactile Internet Decolonisation
Survival Mode The Tactile Internet Creating Intimacy Pre-Futures
The Horror De-Materialisation Time Affluence