The secret weapon of any room is a cocooning blanket, and this one is handcrafted by Lena Rewell from her workshop in Finland. To bring her designs to life, she looms, weaves and brushes them herself, using high-quality mohair wool and a colour spectrum that spans from soft pastels to vivid brights. Those who love to layer won’t be able to resist its textural handle and chunky fringing.
Material: mohair
Country of origin: Finland
Dimensions: 130 cm (l) x 180 cm (w) / 50.8" (l) x 70.3" (w)
Cleaning: dry clean only
Colour: grey
Lena Rewell’s vision is enriched by places – the Archipelagos, the lake district of Sääksmäki in Finland and Lapland – and still life, like a flower petal or a fruit bowl. Her mohair wool pieces are loomed, woven and brushed by hand in Finland, adhering to a small-scale production process. It’s safe to say that her eye for art was written in the stars; her father was a textile engineer, and she recalls feeling captivated by colourful balls of wool when visiting him. So, it seemed like the natural next step when she centred her studies around art and textiles, designing with such keenness that her creations took shape before she even graduated. Today, her daughter Dita Eklund steers the ship, marking a new chapter for this story that dates back to the 1960s.
The secret weapon of any room is a cocooning blanket, and this one is handcrafted by Lena Rewell from her workshop in Finland. To bring her designs to life, she looms, weaves and brushes them herself, using high-quality mohair wool and a colour spectrum that spans from soft pastels to vivid brights. Those who love to layer won’t be able to resist its textural handle and chunky fringing.
Material: mohair
Country of origin: Finland
Dimensions: 130 cm (l) x 180 cm (w) / 50.8" (l) x 70.3" (w)
Cleaning: dry clean only
Colour: grey
Lena Rewell’s vision is enriched by places – the Archipelagos, the lake district of Sääksmäki in Finland and Lapland – and still life, like a flower petal or a fruit bowl. Her mohair wool pieces are loomed, woven and brushed by hand in Finland, adhering to a small-scale production process. It’s safe to say that her eye for art was written in the stars; her father was a textile engineer, and she recalls feeling captivated by colourful balls of wool when visiting him. So, it seemed like the natural next step when she centred her studies around art and textiles, designing with such keenness that her creations took shape before she even graduated. Today, her daughter Dita Eklund steers the ship, marking a new chapter for this story that dates back to the 1960s.