Your Favourite Farrow & Ball Wallpapers Now In Metallics!

April 18th, 2019

Farrow & Ball has announced it will be launching some of its most iconic and sought after wallpaper designs in new metallic colourways available at Brewers Decorator Centres from 18th April!

The collection of 25 wallpapers will include nine of the brand’s best loved and most striking designs: Lotus, Tessella, Gable, Enigma, Tourbillon, Bamboo, Ringwold, Amime and Yukutori. In colourways punctuated with shimmering silvers, burnished coppers and lustrous golds, the designs are ideal for creating an impactful and luxurious scheme in your home. 17 of the colourways will be printed with one of the nine new colours as their ground colour.

Like all Farrow & Ball wallpapers, the designs are handcrafted by the brand’s expert craftsmen, who use traditional printing methods, layering richly pigmented paints to create uniquely textured paper protected with a wipeable glaze.

For popular patterns Gable and Lotus, the brand has created engraved rollers specially for the application of metallic paint, ensuring a precise and delicate finish that can’t be achieved with large-scale patterns using the usual flatbed printing process.

Each design can be paired with a complementary Farrow & Ball paint colour to create an effortless and cohesive scheme in any room of your home.

Head of Creative Charlotte Cosby, who designed the latest collection, said: “The designs encompass some of our most popular designs, including sumptuous damasks, graphic geometrics and delicate florals that radiate character.

“As people have become more confident in their use of colour, so too have they become more interested in the use of pattern and the introduction of texture in a scheme so we hope these designs will excite you as much as they do us!”

The papers are 100% recyclable, made with responsibly sourced paper and eco-friendly water based paint.

‘As people have become more confident in their use of colour, so too have they become more interested in the use of pattern and the introduction of texture in a scheme’

Charlotte Cosby
Head of Creative