Michelle Dirkse goes through some of the fabric and wallpaper she has designed in her  studio. Pillows and the wallpaper behind her are also her designs.
Michelle Dirkse goes through some of the fabric and wallpaper she has designed in her studio. Pillows and the wallpaper behind her are also her designs. Credit: Ellen M. Banner

We’re detecting a pattern here. More than one, actually — from the purely conceptual to the sumptuously touchable — but one at the core of it all: Michelle Dirkse is a true-blue, dyed-in-the-wool artists’ ally. And quite the artist herself. Dirkse launched her own interior-design business five years ago, after “working with a high-end construction company and other interior design firms that I was not connected to,” she says. “I was doing a lot of work to make something happen that I wasn’t passionate about. I couldn’t fake it anymore.” From there, authenticity — and opportunity, and inspiration — helped fashion that foundational pattern. “In my old space, in Belltown, Seattle, I also had a retail storefront, and I wanted to take advantage of that,” she says. “I housed Art Walk for two years and, in doing that, was supporting local art. … Because of that history of Art Walk, and always being on the hunt for client artwork, we developed relationships.”

And now, Dirkse has developed a new line of textiles based on her mutually beneficial relationships with more than half-a-dozen local artists: one-of-a-kind wallpapers, fabrics and area rugs that fill her new workspace on Capitol Hill, her own city-chic condo and the music room she remodeled for a couple of clients, for starters. “Part of why we did this is that when the opportunity calls for a wallpaper, pattern or rug that’s a statement, I felt like there weren’t a lot of resources,” Dirkse says. “I wanted to make something as a team that is different and hadn’t been seen. I wanted something that’s a statement. That’s how it started, but then it became a collection.”

There’s yet another consistent pattern: collaboration. There will be more. “It feels cool to make something new and different with people you know and respect,” Dirkse says. “I’m not done. They’re not done, either.”