Partner Content: Celebrating 10 Years of TWOPAGES: Top 6 Design Reveal & Co-Design Collections Ahead
Delicate block prints, classic plaids, intricate repeats, and rich color stories set the scene for the celebration of TWOPAGES’ tenth anniversary. To mark the milestone, the brand launched TWOPAGES X, a global contest that invited artists, designers, and aesthetic thinkers to step directly into its design and production process. Spanning continents and perspectives, the contest positions collaboration at the center of the brand’s next chapter.
Submissions for the TWOPAGES X Design Contest opened in May, inviting artists and designers worldwide to upload original patterns and palettes for review. From there, entries moved through a three-stage process: an initial jury review in June, public voting in July, and a final jury evaluation in August. Criteria included innovation, market potential, and production feasibility, framing the contest as a rigorous yet inclusive design forum.
TWOPAGES Marks A Decade With TWOPAGES X Design Contest

The Jury and Competitors
The contest was guided by a jury of respected design leaders. Bonnie Christine, an artist, surface pattern designer, and educator known for inspiring creatives around the world, brought expertise in textile design. She was joined by Hema Persad, founder of Sagrada Studio, recognized for blending cultural references with a refined sense of modern living. Their perspectives, joined with the enthusiasm of participants, highlighted the caliber of ideas that surfaced through the process drawn within the industry.

Six finalists were chosen for their distinct approaches to pattern and palette. Jyll Mackie explored geometric repetition with influences of block printing, praised for its livability. UK-based Kate Frost balanced intricate detailing with professional polish, producing motifs that carried clarity and refinement. Kim Morrow reinterpreted plaid and prairie-inspired forms through bold woven effects and a rich, grounded palette, while Leah Nicole Designs drew from natural landscapes and everyday patterns, highlighting beauty in balanced compositions.
Rebecca Hughes leaned into traditional craftsmanship with farmhouse-inspired designs executed at a high technical level. And Sabrina Ramkhelawan blended multicultural influences with block print traditions, creating adaptable designs with broad appeal. Together, the six present a study of contemporary pattern-making, offering an early view of the co-design collection to debut this fall.






A New Era of Co-Design
The initiative brings together designers whose perspectives stretch from California to the United Kingdom. “For TWOPAGES, the contest demonstrates the value of cross-border creativity and the possibilities of co-design as a development model,” says Ray Chen, Founder of TWOPAGES. By combining jury expertise with public input, the program created a dialogue that placed community engagement at the heart of design development. The contest also built on prior collaborations with Amy Switzer, Sara Le, Stefana Silber, and Britt Bengoechea while opening doors to new creative partnerships.
This fall, the brand will carry the momentum offline. In late October, TWOPAGES will host an anniversary celebration that gathers designers, press, and partners for a night of creativity and connection. Guests will preview mood boards and prototypes that set the tone for the upcoming Fall/Winter co-design collection. TWOPAGES invites design enthusiasts, industry peers, and the wider community to follow the journey, join upcoming events, and witness how collaboration is shaping the future of custom window treatments.

read more
DesignWire
Elevate The Art Of Style With Benjamin Moore’s Color Of The Year 2026
Meet the Benjamin Moore 2026 Color of the Year Silhouette, which weaves luxurious notes of burnt amber with charcoal, lending sophistication to any space.
DesignWire
Design Legends On The Lasting Legacy Of Hall Of Fame
Design luminaries share how being inducted into Interior Design’s Hall of Fame impacts their careers as the gala returns to the Waldorf Astoria.

