Atelier100 Drop02 Collection: Product Guide & Imagery

All imagery is available to download HERE


The Mudlark Chair by CAN

About CAN

The three members of Architecture and Ideas Studio CAN, Mat, Walid and Malltwen create architectural extensions to private homes, exhibition design, public artworks, and furniture design, and often utilise materials in surprising ways. Drawing inspiration from a wide cultural pool that includes architecture, art, and sculpture, their work focuses on the specific cultural history of each project.

About The Mudlark Chair

Encapsulating the eclecticism of London, each unique, statement chair is made from London Plane trees brought down in storms at Soho Square and Denmark Hill, anodised aluminium scaffold frames and 3D printed rocks from the Thames foreshore.

A constant cycle of demolition, reimagining and rebirth, this chair brings together and reimagines three disparate elements of London’s urban fabric. The 3D printed rocks represent the rubble of London’s past, the new and ancient detritus washed up on the Thames beaches. The scaffolding is a permanent feature of London’s streets with buildings in a constant state of flux whilst the trees, those flashes of green against the grey skyline, offer relief from the stone and brick expanses of the city.

Entirely manufactured in London. Only 20 made.


Crimp Side Table by David Searcy

About David Searcy

Focusing on locally sourced materials and production to create a more streamlined and sustainable supply chain, David Searcy’s work is inspired by the physical constraints of his materials. His loose furniture items, lighting and homewares are distinguished by an aesthetic that is clean, simple and direct.

About Crimp Side Table

Marrying three forms of mild steel, this table requires no welding or mechanical fixing, creating a piece that is clean, simple and direct.

Inspired by an aluminium change caddy he saw at a restaurant in 2018, David applied a ‘crimping’ technique to lock the tubes and rods together using a hydraulic press to apply 9 tonnes of pressure per crimp. The edge of each sheet steel top is then bent to just over 90° to fit perfectly over the frame.

Designed, sourced and manufactured in London. Only 30 made.


Membrane Vase by Rosie Stonham

About Rosie Stonham

Using both digital and hand-made techniques, Rosie Stonham creates functional design objects that engage with various craft traditions. Her work is inspired by nature and the human body, and explores personal narratives, mental health, and the idea of embodiment.

About Membrane Vase

Inspired by an exploration of identity as told through the body, each piece is made by hand blowing hot liquid glass into moulds made of scrunched up newspaper.

Having chosen glass as a medium to express bodily fragility in hard fragile materials, Rosie believes that using the lungs and the air inside them to create these forms adds a certain delicacy and intimacy to each piece. She collected discarded Metro newspapers to make the moulds, allowing the undulating surfaces and textures to make each mould slightly different.

No two pieces alike. Only 20 made.


Saddle Seat by Jess Flood-Paddock

About Jess Flood-Paddock

Armed with a Masters in fine sculpture, Jess Flood-Paddock makes objects, videos and prints in a range of natural and synthetic materials, some of which have been discarded and others that are raw, including timber, steel, and leather from local merchants. She is interested in the way a product engages with the space around it and with its user.

About Saddle Seat

Made from sustainable materials sourced within London, this seat aims to shed light on the historic theft of bicycle parts in the city that became an alternative currency of exchange. ​ 

This piece has been designed to engage with the space around it and with its user.

The flax is sourced from Easy Composites Ltd, the leather from J.T. Batchelor Ltd and the steel from F. H. Brundel. 

Manufactured in London. Only 10 made.


Parasol Lamp by Charlie Humble-Thomas

About Charlie Humble-Thomas

After training as an illustrator, Industrial Designer Charlie Humble-Thomas realised he craved the physicality of three-dimensional design. Through his homewares, light and furniture, he consistently explores the efficiency and functionality of industrial objects, and his designs are the product of a hand-made approach that incorporates many stages of sketching, modelling, prototyping and physical testing.

About Parasol Lamp

Inspired by factory machinery, this innovative design invites you to adjust, direct and finetune light to suit your setting – simply by tilting the shade.

Using a guided pivot to control and fix the position, the dome can rotate on a full 180° axis, allowing you to downlight a room, bounce light off the wall to create atmosphere or to simply read in style. This piece is made from powder coated mild steel dome, mild steel seamless tubing, shot peened SLS nylon and aluminium.

Entirely designed and manufactured in London. Only 30 made.


Orb Lamp by Annalisa Iacopetti

About Annalisa Iacopetti

Annalisa Iacopetti’s career as a designer began while working with blown glass in Murano, Italy, and her fascination with that material has never lessened. Approaching design with the scientific interest of an alchemist, her work explores the magic of materials and how they relate to the natural world.

About Orb Lamp

This piece is made from a combination of blown glass, recycled glass from a UK industrial lens factory that has been remelted and regenerated. 

Annalisa believes that placing materials at the centre of the design process is the best approach for positive change. It allows the designer to be an alchemist, looking at how materials interact holistically, chemically, philosophically and in relation to nature. This piece, this table lamp experiments with how the use of light and colour can enhance a space.

Produced in London. Only 10 made.


Upholstered Mirror by Jaclyn Pappalardo

About Jaclyn Pappalardo

A multidisciplinary creative whose production includes set design, art direction and furniture, Jaclyn Pappalardo has a penchant for seating, framing chairs not only as functional objects, but as a study of body, shape and language. Her practice is material and process based, exploring new techniques and materials, like using metal to create unconventional upholstery. 

About Upholstered Mirror

Made from leftover fabrics gathered from various upholsters across London, each piece is a one off edition, designed to bring about conversations around fabric waste.

This mirror invites you to see things differently. To notice how the bronze tinted glass reflects colour and creates a language interaction between colours. To admire the sausage-like stuffed frame that wraps around the mirror glass. To observe how the found fabric scraps have been arranged to create something that is both playful and functional. To know that what you are looking at and what is looking back at you is completely unique.

Sourced and manufactured in London. Only 4 made.


The Jug and Tumblers by Six Dots Design

About Six Dots Design

Joseph Ellwood is a multidisciplinary designer working to create bespoke furniture and objects, and the founder of Six Dots Design in London. The goal of his practice is to create locally produced, hand-made versions of the various objects we all use on a daily basis, from chairs and tables to candelabras and ice buckets, seeking to shift consumerist tendencies away from a polluting globalist model.

About The Jug and Tumblers

The visible welded seam and sanded finish emphasise the presence of the maker in each handcrafted piece.

Using aluminium sourced from Fractory, Joseph made every jug and tumbler by hand in his workshop. These pieces were inspired by taking the ubiquitous activity of drinking water and exploring how a handmade object can change this everyday experience.

Designed and handmade in London. Only 80 produced.


Bouée Candle Holder, Dish and Fruit Bowl by Maison S. Sommet

About Maison S. Sommet

Inspired by a range of sources including indigenous art, folk art, and mid-century French and Italian ceramics, Stephanie Sommet makes collectible objects in clay through her ceramics studio, Maison S. Sommet. Working by trial and error, her playful relationship to her material is essential to her work, and she loves the idea that the soul of a project is linked to its material origin, location and environment.

About Bouée Candle Holder, Dish and Fruit Bowl

Inspired by the French term for ‘buoy’, this ‘floating’ sand yellow stoneware candle holder works as a standalone piece or as a set.

Using UK clay from Stoneware and produced in-house at Maison. S. Sommet workshop, this ceramic piece was inspired by the idea of a ‘buoy’ as a floating marker in the sea that helps boats to navigate their way to safety. Stephanie has also created a dish and a fruit bowl as part of this range.

Handcrafted in London. Only 50 made.


Stelo Glasses by Ambra Dentella

About Ambra Dentella

Meet Ambra Dentella, designer and researcher based in London. She is the co-founder of GoodWaste, a design and material research studio. Her design practice is fuelled by a deep fascination with materiality. Her work aims to honour the innate beauty of materials, as well as to transform spaces and experiences through their presence.

About Stelo Glasses

Designed to challenge the aesthetics of the traditional martini glass, each handcrafted piece is hand blown and aims to instil a sense of mischief and misbehaviour.

Traditionally, martini glasses are designed to be held by the stem to prevent your hand from warming up the cocktail. Yet since many people hold the conical part of the glass instead, this design embraces that rule breaking attitude. This allows the form to be driven by behaviour rather than convention; an object that celebrates the special everyday instead of an object reserved solely for special occasions.

No two sets alike. Only 50 made.


Layer Spoon Set by Thomas Wheller

About Thomas Wheller

Furniture designer and carver Thomas Wheller graduated with a degree in Industrial Design, and his carved objects and furniture are shaped by experimentation in materials, processes and forms. Working in wood and other materials, he often purchases timber from local suppliers, or scavenges offcuts from local alleyways, parks and skips.

About Layer Spoon Set

Made from soft green timber destined to be discarded, this wood was gathered by local tree surgeons and then milled, steamed, pressed and trimmed.

Soft green timber often tends to get dumped or thrown away due its lack of practical applications. Through innovative techniques and industrial design, this piece repurposes potential waste material into one of the most practical, useful everyday objects - a spoon

Made from repurposed timber in London. Only 30 sets produced.


Curvy Sleeve Shirt by Abiola Onabule

About Abiola Onabule

Self-taught in the practice of pattern cutting and sewing, Abiola Onabule has always expressed herself artistically through fashion. Her brand produces exuberant, colourful and structurally experimental pieces that incorporate fabrics traditionally used in Nigerian textile culture, such as Aso Oke and starched, crisp cottons.

About Curvy Sleeve Shirt

Using a mix of deadstock and vintage materials, this piece examines how humble cotton can represent the collective chaos of the city through the uniform tradition of a shirt.

This piece uses a mix of deadstock and vintage buttons and, where possible, organic and deadstock cottons. All cotton has been sourced from Dalston Mill Fabrics, London. Ivory (deadstock cotton) Fuschia (organic cotton) Claret (premium).

Designed and made in London. Only 50 made.


Chevron Pleated Vest and Skirt by Alexandra Larrabure

About Alexandra Larrabure

Alexandra Larrabure draws inspiration from her childhood in Peru, exploring how the story of objects left behind by ancient civilizations can communicate so much history. Through experimental yet wearable fine-gauge knitwear and hand-beaded accessories, she translates her own ideas and stories into concrete form through materials, texture, and artisanal techniques.

About Chevron Pleated Vest and Skirt

Using an innovative chevron and inlay knitting technique, these experimental yet wearable pieces is designed to adjust and adapt to a person’s body throughout their lifetime.

Made from a mix of deadstock jersey yarn, stretch viscose yarn and nylon celluloide yarn, the rectangular panels in each piece have been knitted so as to be modified individually and worn in multiple ways. This technique also reduces fabric waste.

Designed for body inclusivity. Only 15 made.


Commuter Drill Jacket by Eastmond Apparel

About Eastmond Apparel

Born and raised in London, Andrew Eastmond makes functional, useful garments that improve the experience of the wearer. Inspired by vintage pieces from his own archive and his London upbringing, his simple designs for Eastmond Apparel are shaped by a nostalgia for the style, music, and culture of old-world London.

About Commuter Drill Jacket

Designed for the city cyclist who wants to forego sporting apparel, the natural fabrics and subtle functionality of this piece ensures safety whilst cycling and sartorial on or off the bike.

With a design ethos of “Functional Style. Joyful Detail. Vintage Inspiration”, this piece was made using dry wax cotton from British Millerain, Yorkshire, reflective trims from Point North, Cheshire and natural corozo buttons from Courtney & Co in Gloucestershire.

All materials made in the UK. Only 50 produced.


Market Set by Kwaku Joseph

About Kwaku Joseph

The recipient of The Metallic Funds inaugural Fashion Design Programme, Pokuaa Ansere works to celebrate being Black and British, particularly within Southeast London, through her mens fashion label Kwaku Joseph. Creating bold and beautiful pieces across a range of garments, she explores concepts such as heritage, nostalgia and pride and gives them form using recycled or deadstock materials.

About Market Set

Taking design cues from the patterned zip up bags and market stall awnings of Peckham, this bold shirt is sourced, printed and handmade in London. Each piece has its own distinct, unique print layout.

Designed and inspired by the blending of old and new communities, spaces and ecosystems Black Brits have made around us, this piece celebrates concepts such as heritage, pride, home, nostalgia and what it is to be a Black British Londoner today. Each piece can be worn individually or as part of a set. 

Designed and made in London. Only 15 produced.


Garnet Ring by Ex-A Studio

About Ex-A Studio

Founder of Ex-A Studio, Elliot Andre Greenfield uses 3D printing technology to create unisex silver jewellery. His work is inspired by futuristic elements, technology and the great unknown, and he sources his metal materials in and around Hatton Garden.

About Garnet Ring 

Made using 3D printed wax, this silver 'cracked rock' band is set with a large Indian garnet for a piece where contemporary meets traditional and silver meets stone.

Made from ethically sourced stones and recycled sterling silver sourced from in and around Hatton Garden, London, Elliot used a combination of 3D printing and traditional silversmithing to create his first stone set statement piece. ​ 

Designed and manufactured in London. Only 20 made.


Puffer Vest by Matan Fadida

About Matan Fadida

Working to create a cohesive range of products that together establish an inspirational world, Matan Fadida believes in the power of local communities. For his furniture, homewares and garments, he sources materials from fabric stores on Goldhawk Road, or a North Greenwich foundry, where he gathers scrap metal.

About Puffer Vest

With its beautiful lines and form, the design of this vest is more like a sculptural art piece that has been blended into an everyday garment to be worn and admired throughout the year.

The neutral tone of this piece reflects Matan’s desire to use materials that provoke a sense of honesty. Nothing is fabricated. Replicating the stuffing used in his cushions to add a sculptural element, all the cutting, quilting and stitching is done in-house so as to ensure a sense of care, quality, fit and shape.

Handcrafted in London. Only 35 created.


Parachute Bomber Jacket by Gina Corrieri

About Gina Corrieri

Inspired by her mixed Caribbean, Italian and English heritage and club culture, Gina Corrieri repurposes secondhand and deadstock materials into fresh fashion and accessories. Drawing on the colours and textures from her upbringing, she designs vintage crochet and lace mats, and bags made from trousers.

About Parachute Bomber Jacket

Inspired by and made from vintage military parachute material, utilitarian military style meets experimental shapes for a jacket that is both classic and individual.

Community, individuality and longevity are at the heart of this design. Made from a single parachute, the various panels and unique stitch detailing mean that each jacket is cut differently. Other repurposed and deadstock materials were then sourced from across London. The result is a piece that can fit into many wardrobes and stand the test of time in terms of durability and style.

No two jackets alike. Only 20 made.


Vintage Traders’ Keychain by Izzi Valentine

About Izzi Valentine

Izzi Valentine was taught the beauty of artistic expression by their mother, a textile designer, and they learned how to use a sewing machine at a young age. Their creative spirit has always been expressed across disciplines, from creating jewellery and accessories featuring reclaimed materials to designing bespoke costumes for queer musicians and performers, and even working on wearable electronics.

About Vintage Traders’ Keychain

Sourced exclusively from vintage traders across London, this keychain is a chain of memory where every ring tells a story, connecting generations past and present.

Made from 100% recycled vintage silver, each handmade chain is unique and can be worn over outfits as the ultimate accessory, used for utility or as a necklace, depending on the story you want to tell.

Ethically produced in London. Only 25 made.


Pantagonna Trousers by Leclò

About Leclò

Inspired by memories of her native city of Florence, Italy, Claudia Lerario’s design practice draws on the intricate forms and details found in tiles, vintage books and mythologies. Playfully fusing classic cuts with whimsical prints and patterns, designs from her studio Lecló feature a juxtaposition of deadstock fabrics from Florence and unique materials from local London shops.

Pantagonna Trousers

Made from deadstock denim sourced within London and featuring a vintage vegan Jacron paper patch, this unisex piece celebrates androgynous beauty for all.

Pantagonna means ‘divided skirt’ in Italian and this piece was inspired by Claudia’s own experience of wearing wide leg trousers that resembled skirts. Deadstock denim from Wooclrest, screw stamped buttons from Aiden King and threads from London Trimmings and FH Clothing Limited were all sourced from across London to create this piece.

All materials sourced in the UK. Only 20 pairs created.


Peace Silk Shirt by lr.d

About lr.d

Womenswear designer Lily Rose is passionate about creating elevated essentials that don’t harm the planet. Under her label lr.d, she is inspired by the needs and demands of everyday life, creating versatile garments that can be worn from day to night and across the season and using stock or low MOQ fabrics.

About Peace Silk Shirt

Crafted in lightweight organic peace silk and naturally dyed with plant based pigments, the neutral tones of this oversized shirt mean that it can be worn all year round.

Known as ‘peace silk’ due to the silkworms being left to naturally come out of their cocoons prior to harvesting, this organic silk is sourced from Jharkhand, India, where regenerative farming practices are used to grow the mulberry trees and promote biodiversity. Even the neutral colours have been chosen specifically so as to be worn across seasons and occasions to promote wearability and longevity.

Fair trade and GOTS certified. Only 30 made.


3D Printed Square Toe Mules by Body Amplification Devices

About Body Amplification Devices

Mario Serrano Puche is an accessory designer based in London. Educated in both architecture and experimental design, he uses digital tools like 3D printing and visual coding to translate the shapes and textures of today’s zeitgeist into geometric form. Under his studio, Body Amplification Devices, he creates sustainable footwear and accessories through 3D printing.

About 3D Printed Square Toe Mules

Designed and 3D printed in London, the inspiration for these mules came from the production process itself. Taking cues from London street style, the algorithmic modelling allows each pair to be printed differently so that no two pairs are the same.

Entirely composed of TPE, a fully recyclable rubber-like material, Mario tested over thirty different 3D filaments before settling on this one. Flexible for comfort, resistant to abrasion and 100% non-toxic, these shoes can also be fully recycled and turned back into 3D printing filaments.

100% recyclable. Only 30 printed.

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Immie Rosie-Wilkinson

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About Atelier100

A think tank and a store all rolled into one, Atelier100 aims to discover and support emerging, London-based creatives by helping them bring their products to life, and inspiring local communities to shop close to home. Now in its second year, it is driven by an exciting collective of creatives, makers and design industry experts. Atelier100 was established to bring the focus back towards the merits of local design and local production, giving agency to ideas that might otherwise have remained in limbo.

Established by H&M and Ingka Group (IKEA Retail), Atelier100 combines masterclasses in business know-how, 1-2-1 mentoring sessions and the opportunity for creatives with original product ideas to bring their concepts to life. Every product for sale has been designed in and around London, and is available to buy at our Hammersmith store. 

Find out more about the Atelier 100 programme here.

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