How to incorporate zigzags into your home
How to incorporate zigzags into your home
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1/14 Go geometric at Harlequin
Equalize curtain fabric, £69 a metre.
Axal wallpaper, £69 a 10-metre roll.
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2/14 Kicking off the trend
Nike’s wildly popular green, black and white team kit for the Nigerian football squad at the World Cup in Russia is now on show at the Design Museum in Kensington.
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3/14 Kicking off the trend
Licensed versions of the strip sold out in minutes in London during summer’s tournament.
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4/14 Serve it in style
Opal marble serving platter, £25, and matching cake stand, £39
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5/14 V motifs
“My travels and research inspire my design,” says west London-based Bethan Gray (pictured). Her new furniture, now at Anthropologie in Regent Street, draws on V motifs revealed in feathers in Native American cultures, and interpreted now in fine materials and pretty colours: for example, mango wood tables inlaid with bone and resin.
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6/14 Powerful pattern
Pouffe by Amy Kent, £480
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7/14 Colourful chevrons
The Liuwa rug by Missoni Home, from £3,178 at Go Modern.
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8/14 Sit back in style
Sahara armchair, £589, in tactile Berber-style pattern, wtih ikat print reverse.
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9/14 Smart sleeping
Eduardo kingsize duvet cover with pair of pillowcases, £55.
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10/14 Cool colours
Cushion in Glacier Paradise, a strong, graphic geometric print in pomegranate pink, navy and yellow on a supple linen blend, £49, Andrew Martin.
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11/14 Shapely legs
Heath folding dining table in solid oak and oak veneer, also comes in walnut, £325 from Habitat.
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12/14 V-design vessel
Zigzag bottle vase, £35 from Habitat.
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13/14 Going green
Strike side table in mango wood with bone and resin inlay by Bethan Gray for Anthropologie, £448.
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14/14 Multi-colour shapes
V-line appliqué and embroidered cushions by Laura Lees at The Mighty Stitch. Prices on application.
Nike’s wildly popular green, black and white team kit for the Nigerian football squad at the World Cup in Russia is now on show at the Design Museum in Kensington. Licensed versions of the strip sold out in minutes in London during summer’s tournament.
Part of the appeal was the exuberant zigzag motif, which has seeped into cultures all over the world. Today you can find it woven into rugs, fabrics and baskets and painted on pottery, in new work from Asia, Africa and South America but its heritage is ancient.
A simple “V” is one of man’s earliest symbols, dating back perhaps 75,000 years. The shape has since evolved to encompass triangles, diamond forms and chevrons.
Discerning decorators now covet “tribal” furnishings brought to the UK by entrepreneurs such as Diane and Jim Gaffney of Textile Traders, who have been sourcing handmade Asian fabrics since 1984, while Magie Relph and Bob Irwin scour Africa for their website The African Fabric Shop. Prices are modest.
Martin Waller brings treasures from his far-flung travels to his South Kensington store, Andrew Martin. He also adapts angular ikat and kelim motifs for chic modern fabrics, from £35 for a linen blend up to £120 for a printed velvet.
“You only need a simple loom to make a V or diamond,” explains Saffron Hare, creative director at designer fabrics specialist James Hare in Leeds. “Updated into Western design, these basic geometrics are decorative without being too specific and are great for layering with florals.”
On a large scale, presented flat on walls, angular geometric wallpapers for modern London caves currently deliver a powerful slug of pattern.
“Triangles are symbols of protection in Berber culture,” says Sophia Leppard, of Yonder.living. Early modernists loved them, such as Le Cobusier, Charles and Ray Eames, and Alvar Aalto.
“My travels and research inspire my design,” says west London-based Bethan Gray. Her new furniture, now at Anthropologie in Regent Street, draws on V motifs revealed in feathers in Native American cultures, and interpreted now in fine materials and pretty colours: for example, mango wood tables inlaid with bone and resin.
Bold, angular geometrics stripped down to basic Vs, triangles, diamonds and chevrons are a stylish foil to this season’s splashy florals, lush leaves and printed velvets. Martha Coates, heading up design at Habitat, says: “I draw on tribal sources but add a contemporary palette. And we are using triangles for furniture and lighting this autumn. It’s a modern take on a tribal look.”
In Gospel Oak, Scottish embroiderer Laura Lees, trading as The Mighty Stitch, is updating triangles with her confident collage, piecing together felted wool, silk and even leather for furniture, cushions, stools and more. Missoni’s zigzags have ruled the home furnishings world since the brand began in 1953. Go Modern in King’s Road is sole UK retailer of Missoni furniture. At Amara, zigzag towels are currently top sellers.
In Chelsea, geo-wizard Tom Faulkner has made the triangle his own, balancing two on their points for the base of his best-selling Ava table. The flamboyant Swoon furniture brand designs new pieces monthly. “We’ve a sophisticated take on the V line which fits a signature bold Deco aesthetic,” says design chief Sam Baldry.
Using simple tiles, make your own V-chevrons on wall or floor. “Play around with different sizes,” says Claire O’Brien, head of design at British Ceramic Tile. “A single colour is a sleek and sophisticated look, but a mix will be unique. Careful planning is vital.

