
"Carpet remnants collected from residential are treated as a raw rather than a finished surface, allowing their fibers, backing, and color composition to be reconfigured through experimental craft techniques. By subjecting the material to controlled melting and compression, the project examines how a familiar interior element can shift from soft to sculptural surface."
"Through repeated testing, Craig explores how these synthetic filaments respond to temperature and pressure, causing the pile to collapse, bead, and fuse. The resulting surfaces move away from the soft tactility typically associated with carpeting and instead develop dense, textured skins with irregular topographies."
"These pieces are then heated and molded over forms, where they are pressed and fused into new structural skins. As the fibers soften and recombine, the layered material produces surfaces that appear simultaneously rigid and flexible."
Jack Craig's Molded Carpet Series investigates how domestic carpet materials can be reconfigured through experimental craft techniques. Discarded carpet fragments are collected, cut into hand-sized sections, and subjected to controlled heating and compression processes. When exposed to heat and pressure, synthetic carpet fibers collapse, bead, and fuse, creating dense, textured surfaces with irregular topographies. The resulting works shift from soft, familiar interior elements to rigid sculptural forms that retain visual complexity. The varied color palettes from different residential sources contribute to the aesthetic diversity of each piece. This transformation emphasizes the contrast between carpet's traditional role as a domestic covering and its reconfigured state as sculptural material.
Read at designboom | architecture & design magazine
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]