the use of natural fibers as a medium for wallcoverings is not a recent innovation. it is a lineage, a thread woven through centuries of domestic and institutional interiors, where the materiality of the wall itself became a statement. this tradition is quiet, often uncredited, yet persistent—rooted in the tactile, the local, the hand-made. it is not about ornament, but about the presence of the material, its breath, its weight, its history.
in the late 19th century, the arts & crafts movement emerged as a rejection of industrial excess. its proponents, including william morris and his collaborators, sought to reclaim the dignity of manual labor and the integrity of natural materials. while much of their output was in textiles and furniture, the walls of their workshops and homes often bore the marks of handwoven reeds, flax, and hemp. these were not decorative elements but structural ones, woven into the very framework of the room. the materials were chosen for their durability and their connection to the earth. the mills that produced these fibers were often small, regional, and deeply embedded in the rhythms of rural life.
the bauhaus school, founded in 1919, approached natural fibers with a different lens—one of modernity, function, and minimalism. here, the material was not a nostalgic relic but a vehicle for new forms of expression. anni albers, a key figure in the weaving department, experimented with cotton, wool, and jute, translating abstract geometries into wallcoverings that were both functional and aesthetic. the walls of the bauhaus buildings in deuschlingen and berlin were often lined with these woven panels, their surfaces a dialogue between the rigid and the organic. the movement’s emphasis on industrial production did not erase the hand, but rather sought to harmonize it with the machine.
after world war ii, the united states saw a surge in the use of natural fibers as a response to the excesses of the war years and the rise of modernist design. in the 1950s and 1960s, materials like sisal, jute, and bamboo were reimagined as elements of mid-century modern interiors. the walls of mid-century homes and offices were often covered in these fibers, their coarse, tactile surfaces a counterpoint to the sleek, synthetic materials of the era. mills in the southern united states, particularly in georgia and north carolina, became central to this revival, producing rolls that were both utilitarian and elegant.