Matter, 2008, a weaving of plastic, tissue paper, wire, cardboard tubes, and sheath-core vinyl
Matter, 2008, a weaving of plastic, tissue paper, wire, cardboard tubes, and sheath-core vinyl. Photography courtesy of Suzanne Tick Inc.

Suzanne Tick: 2023 Interior Design Hall of Fame Inductee

Material innovator Suzanne Tick has the future on speed dial. She embraced sustainability before most of us knew what the word meant, developed a CEU on the post-gender society before it even happened, experimented with 3D knitting before it was a thing, and imbued the woven surfaces that surround commercial interiors with characteristics of transparency, digitalism, and illumination before we realized we needed them. Then there’s the fact that her New York–based textile brand, Luum, launched its Fabric of Space collection, with patterns based on star trails and the expanding universe, the very day the James Webb Space Telescope images of same were publicly released. “Everyone thought we were in cahoots with NASA!” she jokes.

No, Tick is not conspiring with the government’s space-research arm, but she has collaborated with a galaxy of big-name brands during her four-decade career: Tarkett, Tandus Centiva, and 3form are just a few for which she’s conceived upholstery and drapery fabrics, high-performance carpeting and broadloom, and cement-tile and LVT flooring. She has enjoyed a longstanding partnership with Skyline Design, for which she conceives etched panels that bring textile softness to hard glass, and maintains an active fine-art practice realizing tapestries, custom textiles, and experimental handweavings for such clients as the Gates Foundation and BlackRock.

Suzanne Tick on Her Futuristic Approach to Design

Earlier in her professional life, Tick served as in-house design lead for Knoll Textiles, Unika Vaev, and Brickel Associates, but she prefers the outsider perspective and risk-taking opportunities inherent to being an independent entrepreneur, her first taste of which was in 1995, when she colaunched Tuva Looms. “I need the autonomy”—a freedom she enjoys at the helm of her eponymous studio and the decade-old Luum, which recently pioneered the contract industry’s first multipurpose fabrics made entirely of postconsumer-recycled biodegradable polyester, plus other designs made from discarded garment waste.

Having ownership over product and process is Tick’s recipe for innovation—and her career driver from day one. In the early ’80’s, after earning textile-design degrees from the University of Iowa and the Fashion Institute of Technology, she talked her way into a job working for modernist fabric master Boris Kroll—“not because of my portfolio, mind you, but rather my outgoing personality and loquaciousness.” Tick was quickly disillusioned with the siloed production process she encountered, where design was divorced from the technical side. After months of laboring over her first pattern, she arrived one morning to discover it gone from her desk. “I thought, Wait, I don’t get to see what happens to the design next? I can’t live like that! I wanted to see the entire process so I could create the best fabrics.” Kroll ultimately moved her from the studio team to his assistant, a role that exposed her to what transpired at the mill and beyond. “I learned everything—from how to buy the fiber to how the patterns worked.”

The weaver, textile designer, and founder/CEO of Suzanne Tick Inc. and Luum.
The weaver, textile designer, and founder/CEO of Suzanne Tick Inc. and Luum. Photography by Martin Crook.

Get Ready for 2024: See what’s next for Interior Design‘s Hall of Fame event with a peek at what we’re planning for the 40th annual gala. Discover Hall of Fame details.


For Tick, Sustainability is Top of Mind

Her approach has always been holistic and sustainable, ranging from development of raw material and structures to revamping of manufacturing methods. At Luum, for instance, “The majority of what we do is to develop new fibers and invent constructions. That’s why our fabrics feel different.” Her handweavings also utilize novel materials—salvaged objects like dry-cleaning hangers. For a financial company commission, she’s currently warp-and-wefting two centuries’ worth of shredded ledgers; for a paint brand, she’s weaving cut-up sample discards.

Tick, a self-described “fourth-generation recycler,” comes about her salvage mindset honestly. Business at her dad’s scrap-metal yard was the main dinner table topic growing up. At the same time, her family was “very cultured and creative”—her mother was a graphic and set designer—and tapped into Eastern philosophy. “My dad had all the books: the Bhagavad Gita, a library of Ram Dass.” Also stacked on those shelves were her mom’s interiors magazines. Tick owes a lot to those glossies, which helped her home in on a vocational track when, late in her college tenure as a printmaker experimenting with etching fiber textures onto copper, she set about figuring out what the heck to do after graduation. “Flipping through them, I saw ads by Jack Lenor Larsen, Brunschwig et Fils, Scalamandré. I thought I could work for a company that makes fabrics like those—and that I had to move to New York to do it.”

Meditation Meets Design Innovation

Suzanne Tick working at the loom
Tick at the loom in the New York town house that serves as her residence, studio, and meditation center. Photography by Martin Crook.

Manhattan proved an energizing yet scary place at the time. “I arrived at the beginning of the AIDS epidemic. Designers we were creating custom orders for would just stop calling us back.” To handle the stress, she tried Zen meditation, but it never stuck. She gave the pursuit of higher consciousness another try seven years ago, after a period of discontent despite her many achievements, which at this point included a TEDxNavesink talk and work exhibited at international museums. A last-minute opportunity to attend an introductory Vedic workshop coincided with a weeklong staycation, her first in 30-odd years. She found the mantra-based practice transformative, and since 2020 has been teaching it to others. It’s become a cornerstone of her studio culture that she credits with unlocking higher levels of collective creativity. “If I could get more firms to realize how incredible this practice is for design teams! Your awareness becomes open, everything becomes much clearer, you just see what needs to be done.”

Part of de-stressing her nervous system, she continues, has involved “figuring out what I can do to be of help.” She’s doubled down on her commitment to giving back via free weaving workshops and serving on the board of The Light Inside, which teaches meditation to prison inmates and corrections officers. Tick pays it forward to Mother Earth, too. Back in the ’90’s, she was the brains behind Resolution, the first-ever solution-dyed panel fabric (and the first Knoll Textile product to sell 1 million yards); today, her studio recycles all textile waste it produces (almost a ton annually) and has been instrumental in shifting our perception of circularity via envelope-pushing product designs attuned to nature yet equally informed by technology, craft, and human ingenuity.

Watch the Hall of Fame Documentary Featuring Suzanne Tick

Suzanne Tick working alongside Carol Lindsey
A working session at Tick Studio with product development designer Carol Lindsey, one of her five staffers. Photography by Martin Crook.
Suzanne Tick at a Vedic meditation initiator training in Rishikesh, India, 2020
Tick at a Vedic meditation initiator training in Rishikesh, India, 2020. Photography courtesy of Suzanne Tick Inc.

Explore Textiles Design by Suzanne Tick

Luum textiles at Harvey Mudd College's Scott A. McGregor Computer Science Center
Tick-designed textiles for Luum at Harvey Mudd College’s Scott A. McGregor Computer Science Center in Claremont, California, by Steinberg Hart, 2022. Photography courtesy of Steinberg Hart.
Luum’s 2013 Stitch embroidered textiles in Scale Factor, Arc Angle, Second Nature, and Navigate
Luum’s 2013 Stitch embroidered textiles in Scale Factor, Arc Angle, Second Nature, and Navigate. Photography courtesy of Tick Studio.
Luum Collective Conscious collection, 2021
Luum Collective Conscious collection, 2021. Photography by Tolleson.
Yarn components used during the design process at Tick Studio
Yarn components used during the design process at Tick Studio. Photography by Martin Crook.
red, orange, and yellow camo fabric for Knoll
Camo fabric for Knoll Textiles, 2003, designed by Stephen Sprouse under Tick’s creative direction. Photography courtesy of Suzanne Tick Inc.
Obscura collection PVC-free polyester film for Skyline Design, 2021
Obscura collection PVC-free polyester film for Skyline Design, 2021. Photography courtesy of Skyline Design.
Meta Firma carpet for Tarkett
Meta Firma carpet for Tarkett; 2021. Photography courtesy of Tarkett.
Spectral Array polyester upholstery, from Luum’s Fabric of Space collection
Spectral Array polyester upholstery, from Luum’s Fabric of Space collection, 2022.Photography by Tolleson.
Jot drapery for Knoll Textiles, 2012
Jot drapery for Knoll Textiles, 2012. Photography by Brooke Holm.
Woven Chunky Wools weave trials for Boris Kroll, circa 1983
Woven Chunky Wools weave trials for Boris Kroll, circa 1983. Photography by Brooke Holm.
Fila polyester fabric for Knoll Textiles, 2011.
Fila polyester fabric for Knoll Textiles, 2011. Photography courtesy of Knoll Textiles.
Pom Pom nylon carpeting for Tuva Looms, 1997.
Pom Pom nylon carpeting for Tuva Looms, 1997. Photography by Darrin Haddad.

Installations by Suzanne Tick on Display

Matter, 2008, a weaving of plastic, tissue paper, wire, cardboard tubes, and sheath-core vinyl
Matter, 2008, a weaving of plastic, tissue paper, wire, cardboard tubes, and sheath-core vinyl. Photography courtesy of Suzanne Tick Inc.
Woven Neon, 2019, by Suzanne Tick
Woven Neon, 2019, in neon, silicone, and aluminum, a commission for a private collection. Photography courtesy of Tick Studio.
A 1998 prototype for a stainless-steel woven art piece
A 1998 prototype for a stainless-steel woven art piece. Photography by Brooke Holm.
Fiber Optic Sail Cloth, a collaborative commission by Suzanne Tick with Harry Allen for a private collecto
Fiber Optic Sail Cloth, a collaborative commission with Harry Allen for a private collector, 2002. Photography courtesy of Suzanne Tick Inc.
A commission for the Stern Chapel at Temple Emanu-El Dallas, in discarded mylar balloons and mixed media
A commission for the Stern Chapel at Temple Emanu-El Dallas, in discarded mylar balloons and mixed media, 2016. Photography by Martin Crook/courtesy of Temple Emanu-El Dallas.
Transcend digitally printed glass for Skyline Design
Transcend digitally printed glass for Skyline Design, 2017. Photography courtesy of Skyline Design.
A 2016 sculpture woven by children who attended the Pratt Summer School Program
A 2016 sculpture woven by children who attended the Pratt Summer School Program via New York youth-development program Publicolor, where Tick served on the board. Photography courtesy of Publicolor.

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