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Founded in Mexico & based in Miami: Odabashian custom rugs collaboration part 2

August 31, 2012

COVER reported earlier this week on Odabashian’s collaboration with leading Mexican architects, graphic and industrial designers and artists to created a limited edition rug collection. As Jaime Odabachian explained to your scribe, one of the objectives was “to promote the coming of age’ of Mexican architecture and interior design and Odabashian’s role in this history […]

COVER reported earlier this week on Odabashian’s collaboration with leading Mexican architects, graphic and industrial designers and artists to created a limited edition rug collection. As Jaime Odabachian explained to your scribe, one of the objectives was “to promote the coming of age’ of Mexican architecture and interior design and Odabashian’s role in this history throughout the past 90 years”.

Odabashian independently commissioned eighteen Mexican practices to design twenty-one rugs for the collection. Hand knotted in 100 line Nepalese weave using semiworsted New Zealand wool and silk, the collection has a unique postscript – Kickstarter.

Odabashian’s creative leadership includes social media 2.0. The design and production of The Franz Mayer Museum exhibition for this collection was funded in large part by the world’s foremost crowd-funding platform, Kickstarter. The funding page video is still available at Kickstarter. DJ

Con taburate by Ariel Rojo for Odabashian. Photograph courtesy Odabashian and the photographer Fernando Etulain. Copyrights apply.

Lo que el Hombre se llevo by Ariel Rojo for Odabashian. Photograph courtesy Odabashian and the photographer Fernando Etulain. Copyrights apply.

Cho’oh by Aurelio Vazquez for Odabashian. Photograph courtesy Odabashian and the photographer Fernando Etulain. Copyrights apply.

Libertad by Benito Cabañas for Odabashian. Photograph courtesy Odabashian and the photographer Fernando Etulain. Copyrights apply.

Fragmentos by Emiliano Godoy for Odabashian. Photograph courtesy Odabashian and the photographer Fernando Etulain. Copyrights apply.

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