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[Rebroadcast] Jack Lenor Larsen defined 20th century textiles
Episode 131

[Rebroadcast] Jack Lenor Larsen defined 20th century textiles

Iconic textile designer Jack Lenor Larsen shares stories from an epic carer.

Business of Home Podcast

December 28, 202035m 41s

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Show Notes

Not many designers can count Frank Lloyd Wright, Eero Saarinen and Marilyn Monroe as clients, but Jack Lenor Larsen is no ordinary designer. A legend of the textile business, Larsen started his own studio in New York in 1952. His vivid early work convinced a once-skeptical Florence Knoll, who commissioned Larsen to create fabric for her furniture. From then on, Larsen’s business  and reputation grew and grew. Drawing on extensive travels around the globe, he introduced ikat and batik to the American public, designed upholstery for Pan Am, authored over a dozen books and championed traditional craft wherever he went. Today, his work is studied in textbooks and displayed in museums around the world. At 92, Larsen has a lifetime's worth of stories—in this episode of the Business of Home podcast, he shares a few of them.