Seen at the November Interwoven show

This week, Home News Now spent a couple of days at the Nov. 19-21 Interwoven in downtown High Point. The show featured many new patterns, colors and textures that aim to update the styles and feel of upholstery frames that we will start to see at the April High Point Market. With so many style leaders to visit, we captured as much of the new designs as possible during our relatively short visit. Below is a glimpse of the wide mix of fabrics we saw and that will ultimately make their way onto retail floors sometime later next year.

This is a glimpse of some of the neutral color palettes and patterns seen at Bella Home Fabrics. The company showcased them as a ceiling-to-floor display this time around instead of on two different levels.

This is a sample of some of the new fabrics seen at domestic manufacturer Brentwood Textiles, offering a mix of neutrals, florals, plaids and more.

Revolution STI showcased this living room display in its showroom, with a backdrop of various new pillow patterns that are part of the mix.

J. Allen Fabric’s display included this section of new fabrics, which offer earth, russet, spice, green and neutral tones.

At the Sunbrella showroom, visitors got to see a number of new fabric introductions, including splashes of color, florals and other bold patterns that enliven the mix of neutral tones.

Sandi Hester, left, and Westin Stroupe show off some of the new tones and textures at Vision Fabrics.

Bo Gravely of Moore & Giles shows some of the new leather offerings in the company’s Vienna line. It features six new colors this season.

A buyer checks out some of the new fabric patterns at Comersan. It produces a host of fabrics for indoor and outdoor upholstery as well as curtains and pillows to name several core categories.

Customers visit the Direct Textile space in the fifth-floor pavilion at Market Square Textile Tower.

Buyers are seen visiting the Crypton space in Market Square Textile Tower. With a focus on performance fabrics, it continues to lead the industry in both style and design trends.

Here buyers check out the many colorful patterns at Edinburgh Weavers, which shows in the fifth-floor Pavilion at Market Square Textile Tower.

Gruppo Mastrotto also showed in the fifth-floor Pavilion area with a line of new leathers that illustrate its capabilities in production geared toward home furnishings and other segments, including the fashion and automotive industries.

Mayafab, a division of Zhejiang Maya Fabric Co., focuses on fabrics for the upper-end interior design trade and home furnishings industry. It has been supplying fabrics to the home furnishings industry in and outside of China since 1990.

Nelen & Delbeke celebrated its 100th anniversary last year. The Belgium-based manufacturer is a fourth-generation company that provides a wide mix of fabrics to the home furnishings industry.

Customers browse some of the displays seen at RM Coco, which also showed in the fifth-floor Pavilion of Market Square Textile Tower. Its fabrics are used in draperies, shades, bedspreads and other home furnishings.

Thomas Russell

Home News Now Editor-in-Chief Thomas Russell has covered the furniture industry for 25 years at various daily and weekly consumer and trade publications. He can be reached at tom@homenewsnow.com and at 336-508-4616.

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