Quantcast
Channel: Interior Design Archives - retrofit
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 889

Focus Groups Identify New Woodgrains for Laminate Line

$
0
0

Formica Corp. has updated its line of Formica Laminate Woodgrains giving designers a complete, on-trend and usable woodgrain palette for modern commercial spaces. Based on extensive research, the launch includes 16 new wood designs that also meet macro commercial design trends in nature and natural materials.

Formica held focus groups with commercial and furniture designers across the U.S. to identify the most usable wood visuals. The selections that consistently met their needs were neutral colors with lighter-toned options to complement Scandinavian designs, as well as more choices in ash, elm, oak and walnut.

The 16 new patterns are grouped into seven series: Elm, Ashwood, Cherry, Modern Oak, Modern Walnut, Traditional Walnut and Casual Woods, creating a robust offering of woodgrain laminate designs in stain colors from light to dark.

Elm Series

This new species to the Formica Laminate Woodgrain collection is valued for its interlocking grain and resistance to splitting, making it useful for furniture production. While this species is rare in real wood, it provides inspiration for laminate designs with subtle graining and neutral color tones.

  • Buff Elm: A warm, creamy elm
  • Beige Elm: A true beige elm
  • Camel Elm: A darker beige elm
  • Graphite Elm: A warm, black elm

Ashwood Series

Long considered a cousin of oak, ashwood is popular in furniture design and offers a linear, multipurpose visual.

  • Ashwood Bone: A soft, gray-white ash
  • Ashwood Beige: A light chameleon ash
  • Ashwood Oak: Ash stained in a modern oak color
Ashwood Bone and Clove Spice Cherry are new to Formica’s woodgrain palette for modern commercial spaces.

Cherry Series

Often used for cabinets and furniture, this series has a soft, flowing, straight-grained layout and true brown color tones. It is suitable for furniture and architectural doors.

  • Clove Spice Cherry: A mid-brown stained cherry
  • Nut Brown Cherry: A true, dark-brown-stained cherry

Modern Oak Series

Depending on the specific species, oak has a wide range of color variation. Its open pores accept stain readily, but gray stains on natural wood tend to discolor easily. The elegant, straight grain of this laminate series offers a solution for trending gray and black wood designs that are also easy to maintain.

  • Grayed Oak: A true gray-stained oak
  • Inked Oak: A blackened oak

Modern Walnut Series

Walnut is widespread throughout the world and ranges from creamy white sapwood to dark chocolate heartwood. This series is modernized with “heathered” stains, in which brown is neutralized with a hint of gray. The mixed-width, random-match layout with half-cut cathedrals represents the look of solid lumber construction.

  • Taupe Walnut: A greige, mid-toned stained walnut
  • Hazel Walnut: A darker brown-gray stained walnut
Tula Oak features a cerused technique, which involves rubbing a contrasting color into wood pores to highlight the grain.

Traditional Walnut

A classic walnut with a random-match layout and half-cut cathedrals that works well in traditional and modern environments in which architects and designers want to contrast style with a familiar wood visual.

  • Formal Walnut: A classic brown stained walnut

Casual Woods

Unique finishing techniques and a new species inspire these patterns, both featuring a dark brown stained look with random-match layouts and cathedrals.

  • Tula Oak: Features a cerused technique, which involves rubbing a contrasting color into wood pores to highlight the grain. This deep-brown oak design features gray cerused pore details.
  • Antique Mango: Fast-growing, sustainable mango provides a stylish alternative to rare, slow-growing exotic woods and inspires this curvy, tone-on-tone stained brown wood design.

Formica Laminate woodgrains can be applied horizontally or vertically. Material costs range from $1.50 to $2 per square foot.

The post Focus Groups Identify New Woodgrains for Laminate Line appeared first on retrofit.


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 889

Trending Articles