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All Back Issues » January/February 2007 Issue

Topping It Off
Linens capitalize on color, texture, and technology.
by Meade McCabe


Milliken’s new Signature Plus™ fabric has the same soft feel and sophisticated appearance of
their original Signature product, with dramatically improved soil release—meaning longer shelf
life with fewer stain rejects.


The freewheeling bohemian spirit is inspiration for Gipsy Folclo, a gleaming damask design from
Garnier-Thiebaut's “La Vie Bohème” series.


Fashioned of Egyptian-quality cotton damask, Renaissance Lagon by Garnier-Thiebaut, captures the shimmering look of a beautiful blue
lagoon with its classic woven pattern.



The designs on Chilewich’s jacquard Water Lilies


Embroidered Vine are positioned to
one side of the placemat, beautifully framing dinnerware in a subtle way.


 

As owners/operators burnish the hotel brand and strive to find a point of differentiation, table linens offer a way to build a property’s cachet. With growing diversity in dining and cuisine styles and the casual consensus in dinnerware, linens have emerged from a bland background to provide the narrative thread of tabletop design. The contemporary linen aesthetic weaves a picture of muted colors, rich textures, graphic patterns, bohemian themes, and hightech processing into eclectic designs flexible enough to set off bistro casual or luxe-level venues.

COLOR
After a recent explosion of color, the vibrant fallout continues but is balanced by mellow tones and interesting combinations. In the forecast: Milliken & Company’s new take on the ‘50s palette, scrolling from pale buttery tones to golden honey, ochre, and peach, accompanied by a return of South Beach/ Miami shades of flamingo pink, aqua, sea blue, and green. While white and ivory still prevail, the new neutrals are yellows and subtle gray-greens. And “the white-tablecloth restaurant” as a defining term is becoming obsolete.

Designers and hoteliers are choosing linens to express décor, a tabletop theme or mood, and to interpret the environment. A case in point is a seaside resort in the South, which remodeled its dining room with tables dressed in shimmering damask embroidered with seascape and creatures- of-the-sea motifs to reflect the restaurant’s views. Napkins pick up a blue color of the pattern.
      
All of the trendsetting colors—joined by graduated shades of purple—enliven a series of designs with a vagabond flair that connects with the easygoing elegance of casual dining styles. Elsewhere, botanicals are a growing influence.

PATTERN & TEXTURE
As colors became muted, producers turned attention to textures to create fresh looks. A standout example is Garnier-Thiebaut’s two-ply twisted cotton fabric with a contrasting matte-andlustrous striated rough-woven pattern that mimics tree bark. Pristinely elegant in white, it is particularly appealing in a leafy green as a neutral. This technique of weaving new and different yarns to achieve high-style pattern contrasts is being adapted to produce linens that translate to a range of
casual and formal décor schemes.
       
Fili D’oro offers a multi-tone corded textured fabric in chocolate, suggesting a rich urban backdrop for a sophisticated venue. A linear and crisp look is showing up in pinstriped patterns, resembling pique.

RUNNERS & PLACEMATS
A runaway fashion from Europe, the runner is a versatile addition to the tabletop wardrobe, offering a fast way to update table décor or create a casual scene. The design is catching on in conservative sectors to add a splash of color or sample an avant pattern without the risk and expense of a total makeover. With growing minimalism and the bistro casual trend, linens are underplayed, focusing on the table itself. In most upscale settings, however, emphasis is on quality and elegance, and the runner can be the answer to gentrifying a bare table. Restaurateurs and F&B experts who shy away from using placemats are apt to have a change of heart with handsome designs appearing on the market. Clever techniques by Chilewich have adapted the same Jacquard methods of manufacturing fine fabrics to weaving synthetic fibers for producing brilliant mat styles. In addition to jacquard weaves, some of the newest designs feature embroidered patterns, replicate woven ribbons, and metallic flash.
      
New linens reflect evolving styles in restaurant presentation and dining. One designer notes that this flows into the concept of “soothing sensibilities,” which inspires a catalog of services and amenities to calm the tense traveler and harried business guest. Compatible with this movement, coordinated fashions for bed and bath, as well as table linens for room service, aim to enhance a residential ambience. Frette makes a decorating statement with a collection of dramatic black-and-white patterned bedcovers, white sheets, and table linens. A second version features a textured linen combination in safari colors, themed to blissful relaxation.


TECHNOLOGY
In addition to a natural look and feel, linens have a sense of technology that signals design achievements ahead. High-tech, high-end linens have raised questions about care and maintenance, and producers are exploring innovative solutions. A test program by one producer, ongoing with a high-end hotel, involves licensing a laundry service to pick up, clean, and return linens to the hotel restaurant on a rental basis. In another direction, Milliken’s research laboratory is working to develop “self-cleaning” fabrics with high resistance to wear and use.
        
The road to sustainable, more economical products has been prepared by the industry’s development of protective finishes rendering fine linens, such as luminous damasks, stainproof and carefree, while preserving the touch and look of the original fabric. While tablecloth styles remain visually familiar, the new conceits of fine linens are set to dress the table in ways that are original and appealing to diners.

Meade McCabe is a frequent contributor to HOTEL F&B.