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Amandine Lucas

Nottingham Trent University

I am a hands-on designer-maker passionate about blending traditional craftsmanship with contemporary design. My work focuses on creating tactile, practical homeware that merges heritage techniques with contemporary aesthetics to create unique pieces made to last. Through my craft brand, Shorn, I highlight the natural properties of British wool, using its warmth, durability, and elegance to create sustainable designs. Each piece is made with certified, sustainably sourced British wool and naturally dyed using organic materials. This approach honours the rich heritage of wool while reimagining it for a modern context, reducing reliance on imported cotton and synthetic textiles and showcasing its environmental benefits. Colour is central to my practice. I embrace the beautiful variations that can occur in the hand dyeing process to develop vibrant, tonal palettes inspired by nature. These rich, layered hues ensure every piece is truly one of a kind. I am self-taught in the crafts I use, including natural dyeing, spinning, weaving, and crocheting of wool fibres. My experimental, hands-on approach I feel has allowed me to modernize traditional techniques while preserving their authenticity. Through my work, I aim to increase appreciation for British wool and heritage crafts, demonstrating their value and relevance in contemporary design.

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Shorn - Wine Coolers

Category: Interior

Competitions: Home Competition 2025

This project aims to celebrate the beauty and versatility of British wool and traditional handcrafts through a functional Wine Bottle Cooler. The idea behind these pieces came from a final-year university project exploring home textiles that follow zero waste principles. From this research, I came across the amazing natural qualities of British wool, particularly its ability to insulate. Wool's fibre structure traps air, helping regulate temperature and provide natural insulation to keep things warm or cool. That’s what led me to develop these wine coolers: tactile, woollen bottle cosies that can keep wine cool out of the fridge for up to 2 hours, perfect for picnics, dinners, or outdoor events. The coolers are part of a wider ambition to encourage people to reframe how we think about wool, through my brand, Shorn. Often dismissed as itchy or outdated, I want to show how wool can be both beautiful, contemporary and practical, something that belongs in the modern home and lifestyle, not just heritage collections. Each cooler is naturally dyed using majority plant-based dyes, including onion skins, madder root, indigo and turmeric. The dyeing and making process are slow and always a little unpredictable, which means no two pieces are ever exactly alike. I love how this brings soft tonal variation to each wine cooler, a celebration of nature’s colours, not mass-manufactured uniformity. The coolers are designed to be zero waste, being completely biodegradable at end-of-life in a matter of weeks. I also work to zero waste practices across my making practices, even the smallest offcuts from production are saved and reused. Some become filling for other products, others are spun back into yarn and used in my Scraps range. Sustainability is key to every decision with Shorn, from material sourcing to making, to considering the afterlife of each item. Choosing to use British Wool certified fibres as well to ensure all materials are traceable right back to the farm. What makes these wine coolers original is their innovative application of wool's natural thermoregulating properties to create an alternative to the synthetic plastic-based products available at the moment. The making processes of the coolers also make them unique, everything is done by hand from carding and spinning the wool to dyeing, spinning and stitching the fibres. It’s a slow, hands-on process that naturally brings out variation in the materials, making each one completely individual. Though thanks to my depth of knowledge of these materials and processes, I would change techniques to make the design scalable as necessary while still keeping the core design of the coolers.

Shorn - Hank Vest tops

Category: Apparel

Competitions: Fashion Competition 2025

The Hank Tops are a collection of hand-knitted vest tops made from 100% British Shetland wool. Each piece is spun, dyed and knitted by hand in my home studio in the East Midlands. The project began during my final-year at university with a project researching circular textile design, this led me to learn about traditional craft processes and how they could offer a more sustainable alternative to the synthetic textiles and fast fashion systems dominating today. The idea behind these pieces was to reframe people’s idea of wool, a material that is often seen as old-fashioned or uncomfortable, and show how it can be modern, soft, and beautiful. Shetland wool was my fibre of choice because of its durability and comfort. I spin the yarn myself and dye it using plant-based sources such as madder root, onion skins, indigo and turmeric. The colours vary naturally with each batch, which I embrace. Instead of striving for uniformity, I lean into this variation to create soft, tonal palettes that reflect the organic beauty of the materials. The collection is called “Hank” as a nod to the hanks of yarn that each piece begins as. Like the name, the process is simple, honest, and rooted in traditional slow crafts. I don’t waste any fibres, working to zero waste principles, every offcut is reused, spun back into yarn, or repurposed for other products. Every decision, from the materials to the methods, is made with sustainability in mind. All the fibres are traceable to farms that follow good animal welfare practices, and everything is biodegradable at the end of life. What makes these pieces original is the way they combine the heritage of handcraft with a contemporary silhouette and colour story. They're soft, wearable, and thoughtfully made, and designed to last. Each top is unique, both in colour and story, and made with a level of care and slowness that’s rare in today’s clothing industry. With the right scaling adjustments, such as using small-scale batch machinery or working with local spinners and knitters, this design could be produced on a larger scale while staying true to its values. The Hank Tops offer something timeless and tactile that connects people to their clothes in a more meaningful way.

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