Marimekko's Piccolo tea cosy features a striped pattern designed by Vuokko Eskolin-Nurmesniemi in 1953, with pink and white stripes painted in free brush strokes. The pattern is best known for the legendary Jokapoika shirt, one of Marimekko's most famous products. The Piccolo tea cosy helps keep your tea warm for longer, whether it’s a casual morning or a festive table setting. Made of cotton, the tea warmer is padded with 50% recycled polyester.
Piccolo tea cosy, pink - white
Marimekko
Description
Marimekko's Piccolo tea cosy features a striped pattern designed by Vuokko Eskolin-Nurmesniemi in 1953, with pink and white stripes painted in free brush strokes. The pattern is best known for the legendary Jokapoika shirt, one of Marimekko's most famous products. The Piccolo tea cosy helps keep your tea warm for longer, whether it’s a casual morning or a festive table setting. Made of cotton, the tea warmer is padded with 50% recycled polyester.
Product details (5)
- Material
- 100% cotton, padding polyester (50% recycled)
- Colour
- Pink, white, green
- Length
- 26 cm
- Width
- 20 cm
- Care instructions
- Machine wash at 40°C. Follow the recommended temperature. Reshape while damp.
- Product ID
Designer
Vuokko Eskolin-Nurmesniemi (b. 1930) is a Finnish textile designer. Originally trained as a ceramist, she studied at the Institute of Industrial Arts in the ceramics department in Helsinki from 1948 to 1952 and worked for Arabia from 1952 to 1953. In 1953, Vuokko Eskolin-Nurmesniemi joined Marimekko to design clothing and printed fabrics for clothing and interior decoration.
In the same year she married the famous Finnish designer Antti Nurmesniemi. Vuokko Eskolin-Nurmesniemi had a major impact on the formation of Marimekko’s original line of fashions and the development of its industrial production. The fabrics she created were something completely new and avant-garde in the 1950s in Finland. In 1953, she designed the striped Piccolo fabric, and from it the Jokapoika shirt in 1956 – the Jokapoika shirt is Marimekko’s oldest classic item in continuous production. Another beautiful print from Vuokko Eskolin-Nurmesniemi is Pirput parput, very popular and decorating a variety of objects. Vuokko Eskolin-Nurmesniemi worked at Marimekko until 1960.
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