Pattern and color rule the decorating world today, the splashier and more boho the better. So it stands to reason that style gurus are thrilling again to French couturier Paul Poiret, once hailed as the “greatest living dress artist,” who also happened to be a high priest of free-spirited home furnishings.
“I saw Poiret’s fabrics for the first time in our archives four years ago and fell in love—but it didn’t occur to me to bring them back,” says Dara Caponigro, creative director of Schumacher, referring to a collection that Paris’s portly genius created for the American fabric company in 1929 and which debuted a year later. “Now he’s relevant again because people are embracing maximalism.” Thus, Schumacher’s relaunch of the nine punchy, polychrome patterns, from giant magnolia blossoms to…