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DESIGN ARCHIVES


                                                                ROBERT




                                                                WELCH











                                                                The British product designer
                                                                worked to make exceptional
                                                                homewares accessible to all


                                                                Words Catherine Coyle
                                                                Photography courtesy of Robert Welch Design archive



              FEW DESIGNERS COME UP

              a product that is so useful and so admired that it is still
              being made and sold 50 years down the line. Robert
              Welch’s RW2 cutlery (previously known as the Alveston
              set, after the village near Stratford upon Avon where
              he lived) has achieved this feat. It is simple, beautiful
              and practical – the epitome of Welch’s style, in fact,
              encapsulating the ethos and motivation behind this
              progressive British designer.
                 “He was involved in an extraordinary era of design
              revolution,” says his daughter Alice who, along with her
              brother Rupert, now manages the family business Robert
              Welch Designs, which still operates from their father’s
              studio in Gloucester shire. “He and his contemporaries
              – David Mellor, Terence Conran, Lucienne Day, Mary
              Quant – were breaking with tradition and creating
              something that Britain had not seen before in terms of
              materials, form and, most importantly, accessibility.
                 “The 1950s and ’60s were eras of great experi-
              mentation and rule-breaking,” Alice continues, “Such
              dramatic changes will probably not be seen again. The
              opportunity for newness and the appetite for change were
              particular to those times.”
                  Welch was not a designer who was simply tapping
              into a trend or moulding his work around prevailing
              fashions. His motivation was deeply embedded and, in
              many ways, can be traced back to childhood. His father,
              a Navy man, was an amateur woodworker, and







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