BRODERY
Pinton x Charlotte lancelot
Brand : PINTON
Product : outdoor rug
Year: 2026
Material: 100 % PET
Since : 227 x 235 cm (available in bespoke sizes and colors)
For this collection of outdoor rugs, Charlotte Lancelot continues her research centered on magnification as a visual language. The pattern originates from a schematic weaving drawing—a primitive, almost elemental warp and weft—which, once amplified, becomes structure, rhythm, and a graphic landscape. This magnifying-glass effect, recurrent in her work, reveals what usually remains invisible: the detail of the stitch, the gesture’s mark.
Made using a flat weave from a material specifically developed for outdoor use, these rugs combine resistance and sophistication. On this generous surface, an applied embroidery stitch reintroduces volume, acting as a second gesture superimposed on the first. The .stitch within the stitch. creates a textile mise en abyme: a layer that duplicates, highlights, and magnifies the initial design.
Between the rigor of the weaving and the precision of the embroidery, the collection explores the boundary between technique and poetry. The rugs become magnified fragments of a reinvented textile world, offering the outdoor space a strong, tactile, and refined graphic presence—a signature deeply inscribed in Charlotte Lancelot’s universe.
The collection has been designed to be fully customizable in size and color, allowing it to harmonize seamlessly with surrounding interior elements. The color palette, developed in collaboration with Annick Oth, gives rise to a refined and carefully crafted chromatic identity.
We also offer a bespoke colorization service, dedicated to each project, in order to create unique chromatic harmonies that are perfectly integrated into their environment.
For this project, we explored the creation of a sense of volume evoking embroidery through the flatweave technique.
As part of our design process, we develop our own samples in order to support our clients in finding the most suitable solution for their production.
Texture occupies a central role in the studio’s visual language and remains a recurring thread throughout our practice, enriching the sensory perception of materiality.
