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Starbucks WoJo ChairLondon's venerable Savile Row was transformed into a country fairground on Monday as sheep frolicked in the streets to herald the start of Wool Week. Amidst the fluffy conflagration stood (or perhaps more accurately, sat) a pair of curved-back slipper chairs, clad in a new textile derived from wool and recycled Starbucks coffee sacks. Dubbed "WoJo," a portmanteau of "wool" and "jute," the material was first conceptualized by The Formary, a New Zealand-based design company, then manufactured for the Frappucino purveyor in collaboration with U.K. weaver Camira and Wools of New Zealand.1
Starbucks WoJo ChairLondon's venerable Savile Row was transformed into a country fairground on Monday as sheep frolicked in the streets to herald the start of Wool Week. Amidst the fluffy conflagration stood (or perhaps more accurately, sat) a pair of curved-back slipper chairs, clad in a new textile derived from wool and recycled Starbucks coffee sacks. Dubbed "WoJo," a portmanteau of "wool" and "jute," the material was first conceptualized by The Formary, a New Zealand-based design company, then manufactured for the Frappucino purveyor in collaboration with U.K. weaver Camira and Wools of New Zealand.2
Starbucks WoJo ChairLondon's venerable Savile Row was transformed into a country fairground on Monday as sheep frolicked in the streets to herald the start of Wool Week. Amidst the fluffy conflagration stood (or perhaps more accurately, sat) a pair of curved-back slipper chairs, clad in a new textile derived from wool and recycled Starbucks coffee sacks. Dubbed "WoJo," a portmanteau of "wool" and "jute," the material was first conceptualized by The Formary, a New Zealand-based design company, then manufactured for the Frappucino purveyor in collaboration with U.K. weaver Camira and Wools of New Zealand.3
Starbucks WoJo ChairLondon's venerable Savile Row was transformed into a country fairground on Monday as sheep frolicked in the streets to herald the start of Wool Week. Amidst the fluffy conflagration stood (or perhaps more accurately, sat) a pair of curved-back slipper chairs, clad in a new textile derived from wool and recycled Starbucks coffee sacks. Dubbed "WoJo," a portmanteau of "wool" and "jute," the material was first conceptualized by The Formary, a New Zealand-based design company, then manufactured for the Frappucino purveyor in collaboration with U.K. weaver Camira and Wools of New Zealand.4
Starbucks WoJo ChairLondon's venerable Savile Row was transformed into a country fairground on Monday as sheep frolicked in the streets to herald the start of Wool Week. Amidst the fluffy conflagration stood (or perhaps more accurately, sat) a pair of curved-back slipper chairs, clad in a new textile derived from wool and recycled Starbucks coffee sacks. Dubbed "WoJo," a portmanteau of "wool" and "jute," the material was first conceptualized by The Formary, a New Zealand-based design company, then manufactured for the Frappucino purveyor in collaboration with U.K. weaver Camira and Wools of New Zealand.5
Starbucks WoJo ChairLondon's venerable Savile Row was transformed into a country fairground on Monday as sheep frolicked in the streets to herald the start of Wool Week. Amidst the fluffy conflagration stood (or perhaps more accurately, sat) a pair of curved-back slipper chairs, clad in a new textile derived from wool and recycled Starbucks coffee sacks. Dubbed "WoJo," a portmanteau of "wool" and "jute," the material was first conceptualized by The Formary, a New Zealand-based design company, then manufactured for the Frappucino purveyor in collaboration with U.K. weaver Camira and Wools of New Zealand.6
Starbucks WoJo ChairLondon's venerable Savile Row was transformed into a country fairground on Monday as sheep frolicked in the streets to herald the start of Wool Week. Amidst the fluffy conflagration stood (or perhaps more accurately, sat) a pair of curved-back slipper chairs, clad in a new textile derived from wool and recycled Starbucks coffee sacks. Dubbed "WoJo," a portmanteau of "wool" and "jute," the material was first conceptualized by The Formary, a New Zealand-based design company, then manufactured for the Frappucino purveyor in collaboration with U.K. weaver Camira and Wools of New Zealand.7







