This site has limited support for your browser. We recommend switching to Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox.

welcome to our shiny new site in beta – we're like a fine wine, getting better with time! Stay tuned for more improvements!

welcome to adorn

artisan-made, whimsical design, & responsibly sourced

why we love timorous beasties wallpaper

 

"When I decided to open a wallpaper shop the first line I reached out to was Timorous Beasties. I've been in love with their aesthetic for over 15 years. Their wallpaper patterns are not just decorative, they give me the same feeling at the base of my heart I get when viewing really great art. You know that feeling when you are smiling and want to cry at the same time? That one.

There is tension in their work between beauty and things that are distinctively not considered beautiful. It's easy to make a lovely pattern with roses, but to do it with iguanas and pigeons, that's brilliant."

A letter from the owner, Renate Ruby

Timorous Beasties was established in Glasgow in 1990 by Alistair McAuley and Paul Simmons who met studying textile design at Glasgow school of art. Today the studio is a diverse operation and has emerged as a multi-award-winning, internationally acclaimed icon.

Timorous Beasties’ work embodies a unique diversity of pattern, ranging from design that echoes a golden age of copperplate engraving (a time-honoured classic is the Thistle range; or Merian Palm superwide wallpaper) to example of a distinctly edgy nature, an elegant transgression, a display of chic irreverence. Yet, the studio fully engages a design discourse with textiles history by lending an aesthetic evolution to time-honoured motifs.

In 2004 Timorous Beasties unveiled their critically acclaimed Glasgow Toile: by reversing the pastoral context of toiles de Jouy, they transformed the traditional toile device to create an exclusively modern urban genre. The Hotch Blotch fabric series challenges a 1000-year old aesthetic mode by placing disorder within the structure of damask pattern to reveal the inherent beauty of splatters, drips and blotches. Hunting Toile and Urban wallpapers mark a synthesis of 18th-century chinoiserie groupings, Rococo swirls, and Victorian silhouette paper cuts to create a uniquely contemporary ornamental textiles pattern repeat.

The art critic John Ruskin related a universal connection between nature, art and society. Timorous Beasties share a similar world view, where plants, animals and society are visually inextricable. They are devoted to how that impacts as pattern design in our daily experience of furnished spaces, from one-bedroom flats to country villas, to the halls of civic and government buildings, departure lounge backdrops, boutique enclaves, restaurants, and hotels.

Collection list

Collection
Collection
Collection

Cart

No more products available for purchase