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Journal

Digital textures | Large-scale patterns

Preview large-scale patterns made up as curtains and upholstered furniture

Our high-resolution digital textures are photorealistic replicas (or twins) of physical fabrics. With far greater customer reach and longevity than hangers or memos can achieve, digital textures enhance and simplify the ideation of a project by allowing designers to present a virtual scheme, bridging the gap between what is and what could be.

 

Digitising large-scale patterned textiles

Advancements in digital rendering technologies have enabled us to create digital replicas of large-scale patterned textiles for the first time, bolstering our digital offering with a range of multicoloured, true-to-scale prints.

Our already expansive digital texture library now includes replicas of Mokum’s latest decorative patterns: Cordia, Grande Terre, Papeete, Colour Field, and Ronde.

Large- and over-scaled patterns complement the generous windows we favour in Australasian homes, but it can be challenging for customers to visualise these designs as a finished product. With our digital textures, customers can preview large-scale designs made up as curtains in a setting like their own.

Applied to curtains or furniture pieces, these digital twins are the base elements of visualisations, 3D renders, and digital mood boards which can communicate design concepts to clients in a myriad of colours and textures before sourcing the real thing.

Digital textures enable customers to visualize their completed room scene and make decisions more easily as unique characteristics from colour, pattern, and texture to the way a textile drapes are conveyed visually, allowing much of the decision-making process to take place online.

Related

Designing Mokum's Grande Terre

Products & Collections

Grande Terre, our lush composition of intertwining leaves and vines, was inspired by the feeling of walking beneath a flourishing tropical canopy and hand-painted in the Mokum studio by textile designer Leisa Wake. We sat down with Leisa to discuss the inspiration, design process, and connection ...