01/12/2026
Most material innovation fails long before the first prototype.
I’m often brought in after teams have spent months (or years) developing a fabric or knit concept that looks promising—but can’t scale, manufacture, or perform consistently in the real world.
In one recent engagement with a furniture company, the issue wasn’t creativity.
It was feasibility.
The material hadn’t been evaluated against:
- Machine capability
- Yarn behavior at scale
- Cost and supply-chain constraints
- End-use performance requirements for upholstery (commercial or residential)
Once those variables were aligned, the path forward became clear—what to advance, what to stop, and where to redirect resources.
The result:
- Fewer iterations, lower risk, and a realistic roadmap and budget to get the product to market.
Material strategy isn’t about guessing.
It’s about knowing what works early.