MONDAY JUNE 1, 2026

Bedroom designed by Amy Meier

We think about the way a room looks. The way light moves across a wall. The texture of what we touch. But there is another layer of the home, one we rarely consider, yet feel instinctively. The air itself.

It shapes how a space lives. How we think, rest, and restore. In many ways, it is the most essential element of all.

The Invisible Layer of Design

A well-designed home engages the senses. It invites calm, encourages presence, and supports the rhythms of daily life. Yet air, though unseen, plays a quiet but powerful role in that experience.

In modern homes, especially those built for efficiency, air can become still. Carbon dioxide levels rise simply from everyday living. Cooking, sleeping, gathering. Over time, this can leave a space feeling heavy or stagnant, even if everything looks beautifully in place.

It is not something we always notice immediately. Instead, we feel it in subtle ways. A lack of clarity. Restlessness. A room that does not quite feel as fresh as it should.

LEEV50-09 At Sea - Sanddab window shades

Studies have shown that carbon dioxide levels indoors can be two to five times higher than outdoor levels in enclosed spaces without proper ventilation.

Why Air Quality Matters

Air is deeply tied to how we function and how we feel.

When fresh air circulates, spaces feel lighter. More open. More alive. When it does not, the opposite can occur. Concentration can soften. Sleep can feel less restorative. The body senses what the eye cannot see.

This is not about perfection or control. It is about awareness. About recognizing that the atmosphere within a home contributes to its overall sense of well-being.

Grassy sand dunes at the beach

A Natural Perspective

In nature, air is never still. It moves gently through trees, across water, and along open landscapes. This quiet movement is part of what makes outdoor environments feel so restorative.

Biophilic design draws from this understanding. It considers how we can create interiors that echo the conditions in which we naturally thrive. Light that shifts throughout the day. Materials that feel organic to the touch. Spaces that allow for breath and flow.

Air, in this context, is not separate from design. It is part of it.

LEAM532-06 Klara - Wheat Alabaster window shades

Designing for Better Air

Creating a healthier indoor environment does not require complexity. Often, it begins with small, intentional choices.

Opening windows at the start or end of the day can invite a gentle exchange of air. Allowing cross ventilation, even briefly, helps refresh a space in a way that feels immediate and grounding.

Considering how air moves through a room can also shape how it is arranged. Open pathways, layered textures, and thoughtful placement all contribute to a sense of ease and circulation.

Materials matter as well. Natural fibers and woven materials support a home that feels lighter, rather than sealed. They allow a space to respond to its environment, rather than resist it. 

Even the simple presence of greenery can shift how a room feels. Not as a singular solution, but as part of a broader connection to the living world outside.

Living room designed by Marie Flanigan

A Space That Breathes

A true sanctuary is not only something we see. It is something we feel.

It is the comfort of a room that supports rest. The clarity that comes from fresh air moving softly through a space. The sense that everything is working in harmony, even the elements we cannot see.

When we begin to consider air as part of the design, the home becomes something more. Not just a place of beauty, but a place of renewal. 

A place to breathe.

MONDAY APRIL 20, 2026

Friends of Trees Gloves with Hartmann&Forbes hat

A deep connection to the natural world shapes not only the materials we work with, but how we engage with our community.

On April 11, our team joined Friends of Trees at Brown’s Ferry Park in Tualatin for a day of hands-on restoration, planting native trees, shrubs, and wildflowers alongside fellow volunteers and partners from the City of Tualatin in Oregon. Just minutes from our headquarters, this local effort was especially meaningful, offering an opportunity to give back to the place we call home.

H&F volunteers planting trees

Together, volunteers helped plant 1,022 native trees and plants throughout the park. Set along the Tualatin River, Brown’s Ferry Park is a beloved natural space, and it was rewarding to contribute to its continued growth and restoration. With recent spring rains, these new plantings are already beginning to settle in, marking the start of a long-term impact that will bring cleaner air and water, increased habitat, and natural beauty for years to come.

Trees being planted

The diversity of species planted, from Creeping Mahonia and Red Flowering Currant to Ponderosa Pine and River Birch, reflects a thoughtful approach to restoring native ecosystems. Each plant plays a role in supporting biodiversity and strengthening the health of this landscape over time.

Friends of Trees logo

Friends of Trees has been bringing communities together around a simple, powerful idea since 1989: planting trees together can transform both landscapes and relationships. With the help of volunteers across the Pacific Northwest, the organization has planted over one million trees and native shrubs, restoring natural areas, strengthening urban canopies, and creating more resilient communities.

Their impact extends beyond what is planted in the ground. By engaging neighbors, businesses, and local governments, Friends of Trees fosters connection between people and place, and between communities and the environment. Their work demonstrates that meaningful climate action can begin at the local level, rooted in shared experience and collective care.

That spirit of connection resonates deeply with us. As a company inspired by nature, we believe in supporting organizations that nurture it, especially those making a tangible difference in our own backyard. Partnering with a local nonprofit like Friends of Trees allows us to contribute not only as a sponsor, but as active participants, working side by side with our community.

As we reflect during Earth Month, and with Arbor Day approaching, we are reminded that stewardship is not defined by a single day, but by ongoing action. What was planted at Brown’s Ferry Park will continue to grow and give back for decades to come, a living reminder of what is possible when a community comes together with care and intention.

We are grateful to Friends of Trees, the City of Tualatin, and all the volunteers who made the day such a success.

LEARN MORE ABOUT FRIENDS OF TREES
OUR COMMITMENT

THURSDAY APRIL 9, 2026

Organic cotton fiber field

In freshwater environments around the world, water hyacinth drifts across the surface in dense clusters. With its soft violet bloom and glossy green leaves, it was once prized as an ornamental plant, carried far beyond its native Amazon.

But outside of that ecosystem, balance is lost.

Without its natural predators, water hyacinth grows unchecked, doubling in size in as little as two weeks. What begins as a scattering of plants can quickly become thick, interwoven mats that blanket entire waterways, blocking sunlight, depleting oxygen, and, in some cases, halting the flow of water altogether.

To restore these environments, the plant must be removed.

Organic cotton fiber field

Harvesting and Transformation

Water hyacinth is gathered directly from the water, often by hand. Once collected, the plant is stripped back to its essential form, revealing its long, buoyant stalks.

Laid out beneath the sun, the stalks slowly release their moisture over several days. They shrink, lighten, and take on a warm, natural tone transformed by time and air into a durable fiber.

Once dried, the material is sorted and prepared. Some strands remain whole, preserving their rounded structure; others are split or flattened, offering a softer, more pliable quality. Each carries subtle variations in tone and texture, marks of its origin.

Organic cotton fiber field

In the Hands of Artisans

There is no true uniformity in water hyacinth.

Each strand holds its own rhythm, its own irregularity. Rather than impose consistency, artisans work with these nuances, placing, weaving, and arranging the fibers in a way that allows the material to speak.

The result is a surface with quiet movement. Textural. Layered. Alive with variation.

A reflection of water, sun, and hand.

Organic cotton fiber field

From Fiber to Form

Today, water hyacinth finds expression across several Hartmann&Forbes designs.

In WL430-12 Vale – Winding Path Natural Wallcovering, each strand is hand-placed to create a composition of subtle irregularity and flow, recalling the gentle meander of a valley trail.

In our Woven-to-Size Grassweave windowcoverings, such as LE4642 Groove or LE6109 Creel, water hyacinth lends warmth and organic texture, softly interacting with light.

In this way, the material continues its journey, a return to balance within waterways and the spaces we create.

DISCOVER MORE DESIGNS

THURSDAY MARCH 19, 2026

Organic cotton fiber field

Great craftsmanship rarely happens in isolation. It emerges through many hands and perspectives working together, united by a shared respect for materials, process, and one another.

That spirit shapes daily life at Hartmann&Forbes. From the stewardship of natural fibers to the collaboration behind each finished design, the work reflects a collective commitment to thoughtful creation and enduring quality.

This year, that commitment was recognized as Hartmann&Forbes was named among Oregon Business magazine’s 2026 100 Best Companies to Work For in Oregon — an honor informed by employee feedback on workplace trust, communication, and satisfaction.

For us, the recognition affirms what has always guided the company: that exceptional work begins with an exceptional team.

VIEW ARTICLE

MONDAY MARCH 16, 2026

Organic cotton fiber field

Cotton is one of the most widely grown crops in the world. Yet conventional cotton production can be highly chemical-intensive, impacting air, water, soil, and climate, while posing exposure risks for farm workers and surrounding communities.

Organic cotton offers a more responsible path forward. Grown without toxic or persistent pesticides, synthetic fertilizers, or genetically engineered seeds (GMOs), it supports healthier soil, biodiversity, and agricultural systems designed to work in harmony with nature. Organic farming practices can also dramatically reduce water consumption — by as much as 91% — in part because organic cotton is often rain-fed, and organically managed soils retain water more effectively. These choices at the field level ripple outward, influencing the integrity of every finished textile.

Global Organic Textile Standard

Guided by natural materials and responsible craftsmanship, Hartmann&Forbes continues to advance sustainability through thoughtful product innovations. As part of this commitment, we are introducing an Organic Translucent Liner, woven from 100% GOTS-certified organic cotton and free from harmful chemicals. GOTS (Global Organic Textile Standard) is the leading certification for textiles made from organic fibers, setting rigorous environmental and social criteria across the entire supply chain, from fiber processing to finished product, while restricting the use of hazardous substances along the way.

Designed for softness and breathability, this translucent liner provides balanced light control and added privacy when hand-stitched to the back of a Roman shade. It gently diffuses daylight while preserving a clean, neutral appearance from the exterior. Available in Soft White (OTR01) and Linen (OTR02), it offers a thoughtful, sustainable option without compromising performance or aesthetics.

ORGANIC TRANSLUCENT LINER

MONDAY FEBRUARY 23, 2026

Honeycomb handwoven fabric on loom

Within Spring 2026’s Meandering Wilderness, every design reflects nature’s unhurried cadence, layered, tactile, and quietly expressive. Honeycomb, our first handwoven fabric, embodies that spirit, shaped by the artisan’s hand and realized only as needed.

Woven by hand on wooden looms at the time of order, each shade or by-the-yard panel is created with thoughtful restraint. It is a study in intention, where material, maker, and moment meet in quiet harmony. By honoring this deliberate rhythm, we minimize excess and preserve the resources of the natural world.

Honeycomb handwoven fabric shade in window

Echoing the intricate engineering found in the wild, Honeycomb’s dimensional weave interlaces linen and cotton slub yarns with subtle variation. The result is a soft, tactile grid that diffuses light into a warm, textural glow, bringing architectural balance and a quiet sense of sanctuary to the space.

Honeycomb handwoven fabric

This is craftsmanship without excess. Luxury without haste. A return to presence, shaped by nature and made with intention.

HONEYCOMB
Ordering Handwoven Fabric By-the-Panel

 

TUESDAY FEBRUARY 3, 2026

Meandering Wilderness

This spring, H&F STUDIO presents Meandering Wilderness, a collection shaped by the quiet rhythm of the forest and the poetry found in its stillness. Rooted in craftsmanship and reverence for the natural world, the collection unfolds as a tactile landscape of light, texture, and material.

Each handwoven shade, artisanal wallcovering, and refined textile captures nature’s splendor, from the subtle elegance of misty mornings and the velvety depth of lush moss to the whispered cadence of leaves beneath your feet. Together, they create interiors that feel grounded, contemplative, and enduring.

“The forest reminds us to slow down, to listen, to see beauty in stillness,” shares Rebecca Welch, Design Director. “With this collection, we sought to translate that feeling through the play of shadow and light and the weave’s natural rhythm, creating designs that layer beautifully and bring sanctuary to the home.”

The palette is drawn from the forest’s most reflective moments. Velvety greens, mossy browns, soft grays, and earthy neutrals come together in effortless harmony, creating a calm foundation that feels both timeless and deeply connected to nature.

New Woven-to-Size Grassweave designs

Nature, Rendered in Texture

Two new Woven-to-Size Grassweave designs, Tendril and Birdsong, introduce organic movement and dimensional light. Natural fibers such as vetiver roots, banana fiber, and softly textured cotton are handwoven into airy, nuanced weaves that create surfaces at once grounded and fluid, allowing light to drift gently through. Each design is handwoven up to 180” wide, honoring the integrity of the material and the artisan’s hand.

Tailored Basics

A Study in Composure

Inspired by the stillness found deep within the forest, our new Woven-to-Size Papyrusweave design, Reverie, is a study in composure. Papyrus and arrowroot are woven in measured alternation to create a smooth, composed surface that diffuses light into a soft, tranquil presence. The effect is subtle and calming, an atmosphere shaped by restraint and balance.

New Soft Natural Fabric designs

Heritage in Every Thread

True comfort is found in the experience. Three new Soft Natural Fabric designs, Stria, Parterre, and Liscio, are woven in small, old-world mills where generations of tradition guide every thread. With a focus on breathability, tactile softness, and the nuance of artisan craftsmanship, these textiles offer a relaxed yet refined sense of luxury. 

Woven entirely by hand on wooden looms, Honeycomb represents artistry with intention. Each shade is woven to order, creating only what is needed. It is a process that honors the unhurried rhythm of the artisan and preserves the resources of the natural world.

Vale Natural Wallcovering series

Grounded Backdrops

The Vale Natural Wallcovering series captures the textures encountered along a winding path. Like the forest floor or a hidden ridge, these three statement wallcoverings offer a grounded backdrop of organic depth. Handcrafted from water hyacinth, seagrass, and banana stem, these statement wallcoverings bring the raw, tactile presence of the wilderness into the vertical plane.

ECO 106 - a translucent Performance Fabric

Refined Performance

Completing the collection is ECO 106, a translucent Performance Fabric defined by its evenly woven structure and softly heathered coloration. Crafted from non-toxic fibers and certified to Oeko-Tex® Standard 100, these rollershades pair refined function with understated beauty, layering effortlessly with natural woven shades.

 

Meandering Wilderness reflects nature’s unhurried rhythm—layered, tactile, and quietly expressive. It is a collection shaped by stillness and intention, bringing a sense of calm connection to the spaces we inhabit.

NEW CREATIONS

 

TUESDAY JANUARY 20, 2026

WL420-45 Harbor – San Juan

DISCONTINUED:
WL420-45 Harbor – San Juan

WL420-45 San Juan from our Natural Wallcovering Collection has been discontinued and is no longer available, effective immediately. The remaining designs in the HARBOR series are available in limited quantities and will be discontinued once existing inventory is depleted. We recommend confirming stock availability at the time of quoting or ordering and removing these memos from your sample kits.

LIMITED STOCK AVAILABLE:

 

FRIDAY JANUARY 9, 2026

LONDON | PARIS

We are delighted to unveil new international partner showrooms, marking a thoughtful expansion of the Hartmann&Forbes presence into two of the world’s most influential design capitals — London and Paris.

London, England | Valley & Laurel, Chelsea Harbour
In the design heart of Chelsea Harbour, our London partner showroom, Valley & Laurel, offers a serene space to experience the artistry of our natural collections. We welcome you to explore the textures, tones, and handwoven beauty of Hartmann&Forbes in an environment designed for quiet inspiration and thoughtful collaboration. By appointment only. Grand opening – March 2026.

Paris, France | Ido Diffusion, 10 rue du Bac, 75007
Set within a storied quarter on the Left Bank, our Paris partner galerie invites discovery in a space defined by refinement and intimacy. By appointment only, this private destination offers an immersive way to experience our weaves, guided with care and expertise by your Hartmann&Forbes representative.

These new international locations reflect our ongoing commitment to craftsmanship, thoughtful design, and supporting the global design community, bringing Sanctuary, by nature, to designers around the world.

TUESDAY JANUARY 6, 2026

Tailored Basics

Tailored Basics is designed for projects that require a faster, Tailored-to-Size approach—without compromising the artistry and care that define Hartmann&Forbes.

Crafted from natural Grassweave and Papyrusweave textiles, Tailored Basics begins with pre-woven natural fibers, selected for their texture and timeless appeal. Each textile is then tailored into shades and hand-finished in our Oregon workshop, guided by the same standards of care that shape every Hartmann&Forbes creation.

Tailored Basics

This thoughtful process results in a curated offering of Tailored-to-Size designs that feel calm, grounded, and enduring. A versatile range of textures and timeless neutrals that work seamlessly across interiors, delivering handcrafted window coverings rooted in craftsmanship and available in just 14 crafting days.

Explore the Tailored Basics brochure to view the full assortment, and order complimentary memos 24/7 through HartmannForbes.com/samples to experience the textures firsthand.

EXPLORE THE BROCHURE
ORDER MEMOS

 

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