Here's An Inside Look At How Wicker Is Made At England's Oldest Workshop
Here's An Inside Look At How Wicker Is Made At England's Oldest Workshop
Since Soane Britain cofounder Lulu Lytle rescued the U.K.’s last rattan workshop in 2010, the designer has become something of a standard-bearer for wicker today—not to mention tireless champion of British workmanship. “Once a particular craft has gone, it will never come back," she insists. "It needs protecting the same way the rhino does.”
Such was the thinking behind safeguarding the fledgling Leicestershire workshop that crafts her company's most iconic wicker pieces (like the Rattan Ripple Console, shown below). Deeply embedded in England's long wicker legacy, the shop originated more than a century ago, even contributing to war efforts in the 1940s by crafting baskets for reconnaissance hot air balloons, seats for aircraft, and cases for artillery shells.
But as Far East goods became more accessible and less expensive, demand for the locally made wares began to dry up and the company teetered. Sensing both promise and urgency in the legacy firm, Lytle brought it into the fold of Soane's furniture and lighting outfit. Today, talented craftspeople continue the historic weaving traditions, one piece at a time. Here, she offers a peek at the handmade journey from cane to coveted console inside the storied workshop.
The traditional craft lives on in the U.K., thanks to Soane Britain.