STEWART HORNER, INTERIOR DESIGNER | PENNY BLACK INTERIORS
After a successful career at Nike, Stewart Horner decided to follow his everlasting passion for interior design. He brings extraordinary design experience to Heritage and is already well on his way to becoming an accomplished interior designer. Stewart recently shared his journey with us and we are excited to share it with you!
I was born in Sheffield Northern England in 1969, an only child. I struggled academically but discovered a talent for art and design at an early age. My passion for interior design goes back to my early teens. My Grandfather was a builder and my dad was an electrician. They would re-decorate the house every three years religiously. They made a point of allowing me to decorate my bedroom exactly as I wanted. This freedom brought about my creativity.
I was a huge Adam Ant fan in the early 1980’s and his flamboyant and anarchic sense of style inspired me and led me to my path towards fashion. I later discovered Vivienne Westwood, one of the UK’s most iconic and prolific designers. I have been pretty eccentric most of my life when it comes to what I like to wear and I’ve had a passion for clothing, hats and shoes for as long as I can remember.
I studied general art and design at college and went on to study fashion illustration at a bachelors level, with the hopes of being a fashion illustrator. Following my graduation I was torn as to whether I should pursue a career in fashion or lean more towards interiors. I had a brief stint with fame while considering my future when I entered the BBC Interior Designer of the year competition that ran on the BBC in 1999. I won the competition and filmed three episodes of “BBC Home Front” in 1999-2000. In hind sight I should have used this to springboard my interior design career. Instead I followed my passion for snowboarding and fashion and decided to start a British based snowboard clothing brand, Lie Snowboard Clothing.
I ran this company for three years before being drafted by Nike. I joined their European design team in Amsterdam designing sportswear, which is where I met my wife, Lauren. I was married In Las Vegas in 2006 and went on to have three girls. Hudson, named after the Philipe Stark designed Hotel in NYC, Monroe, named after the icon herself, and Parker, named after the Jonathan Adler designed Parker Meridien Hotel in Palm Springs.
Within four years from the time I started working for Nike in Amsterdam, I was transferred to Nike here in Oregon to head up the design team as Design Director for Nike All Conditions Gear (ACG).
My Nike career went on to put me in Nike sportswear, Nike skateboarding, Nike snowboarding, Nike women’s training, and finally for the past three years in the Nike Explore Team (NXT) as Apparel Innovation Design Director. In this position I directed design projects to create innovative performance platforms for various categories including running, basketball and training. During my 16 years at Nike I worked with many athletes, designed the Olympic medal stand uniform for the Vancouver Olympics, and designed collaboration work with Pendleton and The Timorous Beasties, to name a few, and have traveled the world representing Nike Design.
I also fully renovated three homes and worked on numerous interior projects with Nike. The past few years left me pondering my future. Nike is an incredible company and provided me many luxuries in life but I was unhappy creatively. I began to realize the only thing keeping me there was the pay check.
Finally I had enough and I thought that at 47 years old this may be the only chance I have to make a change. I discovered Heritage while looking for part-time Autocad and Sketchup classes. It seemed like the perfect way to get some of the technical education I will need for my new career without needing to return to full time education. I left Nike back in November to start up my design business with my wife, ‘Penny Black Interiors and Penny Black Home,’ and enrolled at Heritage.
The name Penny Black comes from The Penny Black Stamp. It was the first ever postage stamp and the design depicted Queen Victoria’s head, printed in black ink. It is a very rare and valuable stamp. The reason I love this namesake is that the stamp as designed back in 1839 has remained pretty much the same for well over 160 years. Every stamp we know today, from a design standpoint, is based on that first stamp. It’s a design that has developed but stayed the test of time. I like to think the same will be said for our designs.
Our vision is to build a home brand, producing and collaborating on a variety of home products. We will focus on residential projects to start and will expand into hospitality. In the next two years we will open a design studio and a store that will give the business multiple revenue streams. Long term, we would like to develop a hotel and a cabaret club and expand our business internationally. We live by the quote “All or nothing” and our mission is to disrupt the interior design business in the Portland and surrounding areas, to provide unique interior solutions and product sourcing to suit the lifestyle of a discerning few (with some compromise along the way I’m sure).