home style - Clare Gogerty
Transcription
home style - Clare Gogerty
HOME STYLE THE POUFFE T he return of the pouffe – who’d have thought it? There it was relegated to a footnote in interior design history – accompanied by the glass-top coffee table and chianti-bottle lamp stand – when it was pulled from the shagpile by a new generation of designers. And who can blame them? This is a supremely useful piece of furniture. Unobtrusive and portable, it works everywhere. There it is propping up Dad’s feet as he does the crossword, and there it is again with a pile of magazines and a tea tray placed on top, toppling with sandwiches. Children love the pouffe’s childfriendly dimensions: it’s the ideal seat for TV watching, playing games on and shoving siblings off. Cats, of course, love to snooze on its perfectly feline-sized surface. This is a seat made for perching on, not for lounging all over like its adolescent relative, the sloppy bean bag. The internal wooden frame of the cube and barrel-shaped versions (back on the high street, reinvented in leather) gives them the structure and rigidity that bean bags lack. FYI, if it has a hinged lid and is used for storage, then it’s an ottoman. Wooden feet may be added for extra stability, but pouffe purists would point out that it’s then a stool. The key definition of a pouffe is that it is completely covered in material. Back in the day, when the pouffe graced many an Abigail’s-Party-type interior and guests sat upon it martini glass in hand, it was made from leather and elaborately tooled. These original, softly rounded pouffes came from Marrakech, brought over by enterprising traders raiding the city’s souks, and added a touch of the exotic to G-plan sideboards and button-backed armchairs. (Happily they’ve made a return to the high street.) But then, the pouffe has always trailed a glamorous heritage: its name derives from 19th- century French meaning ‘something puffed out’ (presumably alluding to its dumpily inflated shape, not some sort of furniture breathlessness). The spherical shape endures, but these days knitted versions resembling sea creatures have mostly, but not entirely, replaced them. This is the moment to let a pouffe back into your living room. It’s hard to understand why it ever left. A CL ASSIC & T WO T WISTS PHOTOGRAPHY: GETTY IMAGES Words: CLARE GOGERTY Moroccan pouffe | £95 A welcome return to British homes for this leather pouffe, hand tooled in Marrakech. www. bohemiadesign.co.uk The pouffe THE CLASSIC Nomad pouffe | £125 Nestle one of these embroidered linen beauties among a clutch of cushions to create a laid-back Sixties-style den. www.bodieandfou.com TWO GREAT TAKES Knitted pouffe | £90 A knit chunky enough to withstand any number of toddlers. Plus it looks like a sea anemone. www.johnlewis.com 96 SIM27.home_style.indd 96 8/14/14 3:57 PM
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