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Kravet Inc., is a home furnishings company established in 1918. This fifth generation family business distributes fabrics, furniture, wallcoverings, trimmings, carpets and accessories.
Kravet Inc. owns Kravet, Lee Jofa, GP & J Baker, Brunschwig & Fils and Donghia. It has locations in North America and worldwide.
The Kravet Inc. design studio is based in NYC, with a warehouse in Anderson, South Carolina, and corporate offices on Long Island. The company has more than 40 showrooms in the U.S. and Canada and maintains offices and a distribution warehouse in Poole, United Kingdom.
Shmuel Kravetsky, later Samuel Kravet, (1873-1947) emigrated from Grodno, Belarus, to the United States in 1903 with his wife and three sons. [1] As a tailor, he began supplying tailored apparel to an upscale clientele in the New York metropolitan area. Recognizing in his clients a desire for interior design assistance as well, he began fashioning decorative trimmings such as tie-backs and tassels, which he would offer when he made house calls. With this subtle shift from the design of apparel to the design of interior design products, Samuel Kravet participated in the historical development of a then emerging interior design industry.
In 1918, Samuel Kravet opened a small trimmings store on Norfolk Street on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. In 1923, his four sons – Morris, Sam, Sol, and Hy – joined the business. They relocated to E. 21st St. and changed the company's name to S. Kravet & Sons. In 1924, they began offering decorative fabrics.
S. Kravet & Sons relocated to 38 E. 30th St. and began selling to the interior design trade exclusively. The business grew quickly. In 1952, the company relocated to 104 E. 25th St. where it would have new offices as well as a warehouse for the storage and preparation of product. In 1963, the company changed its name to Kravet Fabrics, Inc. [1] and expanded once again, this time moving to a larger warehouse and office facility in Woodbury, Long Island, New York. The company began exporting in 1965 and establishing showrooms nationwide in 1970. Further expansions to Anderson, South Carolina and Canada followed.
The Kravet high-end licensing division began in 1993, to showcase designers and the design accents of famous locations, lifestyles and brands. The Mark Hampton Fabric and Trimmings collections were the first license to join the Kravet family. Its success has brought forth numerous other licensed collections. These include fabric, carpet and trimmings collections created by interior designers such as Alexa Hampton, Barclay Butera, Barbara Barry, Candice Olson, Michael Berman, Michael Weiss, Sarah Richardson, Vicente Wolf, David Phoenix, Andrew Martin, Kelly Wearstler, Nate Berkus, Sue Firestone, Jan Showers, Carrier and Company, Bunny Williams, Suzanne Rheinstein, Thomas O’Brien, Les Ensembliers, Barry Lantz, Malene B., Lilly Pulitzer and Windsor Smith, as well as collections inspired by fashion brands such as Oscar de la Renta, Diane von Furstenberg, kate spade new york, Echo Design, Ralph Lauren, Joseph Abboud, Calvin Klein Home, and Thom Filicia. [2]
Kravet expanded its product offerings to include furniture in 1991, carpet in 2005, and lighting in 2007. It also acquired home furnishing manufacturer Lee Jofa in 1995 and fabric and upholstery maker GP & J Baker in 2001. To encompass this broader offering of products, in 2002, the company changed its name to Kravet Inc. In 2011, Kravet acquired prestigious fabric and upholstery maker Brunschwig & Fils in a bankruptcy auction for $9.655 million. [3] Kravet Inc. has supplied textiles for many historic properties. Brunschwig & Fils subsequently provided the upholstery for the 2015 Obama chairs, used in the 2015 renovation of the State Dining Room at the White House in Washington, D.C. In 2015, Kravet expanded to include finished goods, launching the first-ever trade only e-commerce site, CuratedKravet.
In August 2020, Kravet Inc. acquired all assets from Donghia. [4] Those assets include all of the intellectual property, designs, patents, copyrights, inventory, website, social media sites, artwork, archives and sampling.
In 2011, Kravet constructed an archive at their headquarters on Long Island with the acquisition of Brunschwig & Fils who collected a majority of the textiles in the collection. This massive collection of items including textile fragments, pieces of clothing and documents come from all over the world and all throughout history. Kravet Inc.’s diverse archive rivals many museums and features a variety or relics, such as eighteenth-century copperplate printed fabrics and lush floral nineteenth-century block printed furnishing fabrics. Other documents found in the archive include intricate toiles, ancient artisan-skilled woven textiles, hand-embroidered paisleys and an extensive collection of rare hand-block tiles. Kravet Inc. made parts of the archive available to the public through an exhibit featured at the New York School of Interior Design in the Fall of 2019. This extensive archival collection is continuously in acquisition mode.
Upholstery is the work of providing furniture, especially seats, with padding, springs, webbing, and fabric or leather covers. The word also refers to the materials used to upholster something.
Olefin fiber is a synthetic fiber made from a polyolefin, such as polypropylene or polyethylene. It is used in wallpaper, carpeting, ropes, and vehicle interiors.
Burlington Industries, formerly Burlington Mills, is a diversified American fabric maker based in Greensboro, North Carolina. Founded by J. Spencer Love in Burlington, North Carolina in 1923, the company has operations in the United States, Mexico, and India and a global manufacturing and product development network based in Hong Kong with over 8,000 employees on several sites in the United States, Canada and worldwide.
International Textile Group (ITG) is a diversified American fabric maker based in Beverly Hills, California. The company was founded in Greensboro, North Carolina by Wilbur Ross and was sold to Platinum Equity in 2016, leading to its move from Greensboro to Beverly Hills.
Alexander Girard, affectionately known as Sandro, was an architect, interior designer, furniture designer, industrial designer, and a textile designer.
Libeco is a Belgian textile company which manufactures and distributes linen and linen products. The company grew out of the merger of Libeco and Lagae on 2 June 1997. The head office is located in Meulebeke in a region of Flanders, Belgium, which is known for its flax culture and textile industry.
OMNOVA Solutions Inc., is a global manufacturer of laminates, performance films and coated fabrics. OMNOVA was founded in 1999 when GenCorp spun off its Decorative & Building Products and Performance Chemicals businesses into a separate, publicly traded company. OMNOVA's world headquarters is located in Beachwood, Ohio; with additional sales, manufacturing and distribution locations throughout Europe and Asia.
Franco Scalamandré was a co-founder of Scalamandré Inc., a US manufacturer of traditional textiles, decorative textile trims, wall covering, and carpeting.
Designers Guild is an international home and lifestyle company with a flagship store and showrooms on Kings Road and Marylebone High Street in London, as well as offices in London, Paris, and Munich.
Donghia is an American brand of decoration for furniture, textiles, lighting, and accessories. Italian-American interior designer Angelo Donghia founded Donghia in 1968. It is currently owned by Kravet Inc.
Angelo Donghia was an American interior designer.
F. Schumacher & Co. is a privately held textile company based in New York City and Fort Mill, South Carolina. Schumacher primarily designs and manufactures fabrics, wall covering, trimming, floor covering, finished goods and paint for the interior design industry in the United States.
Angela Adams is an American rug designer. Adams partnered with her husband and furniture designer, Sherwood Hamill, to launch a website, dedicated to the creation of custom rugs and custom furniture in Portland, Maine.
Warner & Sons was a British textile manufacturer specialising in silk for the furnishing industry. It wove the coronation robes for both Edward VII and Elizabeth II and had associations with some of the leading textile designers and artists of the 19th and 20th centuries.
Roger Oates Design is a British company that designs, manufactures and retails flooring, fabric and interior products. The company is best known for Venetian Flatweave, a narrow width wool floorcovering usually fitted as a stair runner.
Charlotte Moss is an American interior designer, author, and philanthropist. Since launching her career in 1985, she has received numerous honors, including the New York School of Interior Design’s Centennial Medal, Elle Décor Vision Award, and the Timeless Design Award from the Royal Oak Foundation. Charlotte is named one of Elle Décor’s Grand Masters Top Designers. She lectures widely on the arts of living, has authored 11 books, and writes for several magazines.
Balsan is a French textile flooring company and market leader in its sector. With roots dating back to 1751 in Châteauroux, its origins are linked to the Royal Manufacture Château du Parc. The company is the fourth largest employer in the department of l’Indre.
Zelina Comegys Brunschwig was an interior and fabric designer.
Chatham Manufacturing Company is an American textile brand founded in 1877 that has made automobile upholstery, jeans, and flannels. Its most famous product is the Chatham Blanket. It was the largest blanket manufacturer in the world at its height.
Roger Etienne Brunschwig was a much‐decorated French hero of the two world wars. He was decorated with the Grand-croix of the Legion of Honor in 1964 by general de Gaulle.