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American Style: Schumacher

 Behind the brand: Schumacher. Green and white patterned wallpaper in hallway, decorated console table, artwork on wall, checkered chair. Schumacher’s  creative director  Dara Caponigro. Patterned wallpaper with chair.
Behind the brand: Schumacher. Green and white patterned wallpaper in hallway, decorated console table, artwork on wall, checkered chair. Schumacher’s creative director Dara Caponigro. Patterned wallpaper with chair.

Schumacher's roots lie in a deep respect for craftsmanship and artisanal skills – and the team continues to scour the world for experts in their respective fields.

The brand's interior design offering is dazzling: alongside the vast archive, each month a new collection of wallpaper, fabric and trims is produced – Schumacher is the only company in the industry to do this.

We delve into the brand's history, and explore their influence on the world of interior design and decoration.

The Schumacher story

Layered photos, black and white and colorful pictures, creating a collage of Schumacher's history
Layered photos, black and white and colorful pictures, creating a collage of Schumacher's history

Frederic Schumacher, a Parisian émigré living in New York, set up shop in 1889 in what was known as Ladies’ Mile, a historic shopping district. Schumacher decided to import exquisite French designs for America’s high society. It was a clever move: within just 10 years, his fabrics appeared in houses owned by leading industrialist families including the Vanderbilts and Carnegies.

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In 1895, Schumacher bought a weaving mill and the company developed from being an importer to a design house and manufacturer. His client list grew and within a few years the architect Stanford White had commissioned a shimmering silk lampas (a figured silk fabric) for the walls of President Roosevelt’s White House.

In the decades that followed, Schumacher was responsible for introducing Art Nouveau and Art Deco style to American interior design. The company arranged for the fashion designer Paul Poiret to travel from France in 1930 to create a designer fabric collection – a first for the industry.

‘Paul’s patterns were unforgettable – wild and colorful and bigger than life, just like him,’ explains Dara Caponigro, the company’s creative director.

This was an initial step into collaborations with artists and designers, which later included Dorothy Draper, Cecil Beaton, Frank Lloyd Wright, Vera Neumann and Karl Lagerfeld.

S Is For Style by Dara Caponigro | $59.98 at Amazon
Learn how to decorate with Schumacher's iconic prints and patterns in your home with their Schumacher style guide, S Is For Style.

The next chapter

Colorful green and pink wallpaper, jungle inspired scene with animals, tall wooden chair placed in front of wall with white and green striped upholstery
Colorful green and pink wallpaper, jungle inspired scene with animals, tall wooden chair placed in front of wall with white and green striped upholstery

Demonstrating an ability to adapt to the fast-changing pace of life in the 20th century, in 1923 Schumacher launched a ready-made line of fabrics and accessories under the Waverly brand.

The brand’s fabrics and wallpapers also started to appear on the big screen, including in Gone with the Wind. It even produced parachute silks during World War II, and in the 1960s Mick Jagger was photographed in his apartment against a wall of Queen of Spain, a design still popular today.

Schumacher in a digital world