The brand recently announced a brand-new acoustic wall panel range – Muse – for superior acoustic performance within commercial interiors.

Muse Fluid
Micheal Young, with his passion for pioneering technology, has earned the reputation of being one of Asia’s most exciting industrial designers. He creates objects that explore the technological ingenuity of the continent, and the designer has collaborated with Woven Image on a new range of acoustic wall panels titled Muse.

Muse Cloudy
With unusual patterns, contrasting colour prints as well as subtle tone-on-tone colours and Pearlescent ink, Muse makes for a fitting choice of product to achieve seamlessly finished floor-to-ceiling applications.
The collection is available in a range of three designs – Muse Fluid, Muse Cloudy and Muse Mineral. Muse Fluid is reminiscent of the movements of the ocean and is available in five colourways – Ice, Ivory, Goldeneye, Lavender and Emerald. Muse Cloudy, on the other hand, is themed around a series of varying dots that converge to produce a cloud-like effect and contains three options. Lastly, Muse Mineral can be specified in two different versions – Calcite and Steel.

Muse Fluid
Young believes that his studio has been able to lend a very particular sensibility to the product. According to the designers, “I believe that the collection is genuinely cutting edge.” He explains. ‘It seems to me that an industrial design office is going to take a different approach to create a pattern than an artist or even a graphic designer. We created the aesthetic for Muse using a software program called Grasshopper. By setting up an animated algorithm, we generated a changing two-dimensional pattern and freed the animation at a particular point to build the final image. In other words, we are not creating conceptual decoration but technical decoration. The finished results look wonderfully mathematical.”

Muse Mineral
Within commercial interior environments, the wall panels work to reduce reverberated noise and improve the acoustic quality of the space. The product has also been awarded a Global Green Tag certification for its eco-conscious construction.

Muse Fluid
Young’s collaboration with Woven Image is a mark of how far the brand has come when it comes to creating a design that transforms the indoor experience.
For more design inspo, subscribe to our weekly newsletter today.
INDESIGN is on instagram
Follow @indesignlive
A searchable and comprehensive guide for specifying leading products and their suppliers
Keep up to date with the latest and greatest from our industry BFF's!
The Geelong College’s Sport and Wellbeing Centre ‘Belerren’ designed by Wardle is designed around bringing in natural light. But Shade Factor’s job was to help modulate and precisely control it for the most important competitive moments.
Stepping into Intuit’s Sydney workplace certainly doesn’t feel like walking into an office. Why? In this film, we discover that, when joy takes precedence as a design driver, even a high-performing commercial CBD headquarters can feel like an intuitive wonderland that invites employees to choose their own adventure.
Natural stone shapes the interiors of Billyard Avenue, a luxury apartment development in Sydney’s Elizabeth Bay designed by architecture and design practice SJB. Here, a curated selection of stone from Anterior XL sets the backdrop for the project’s material language.
Presented by Woven Image
Kerstin Thompson, architect and advocate, has influenced the language of Australian architecture and made a profound difference to people and place.
In this SpeakingOut! episode, Andrew Tu’inukuafe, Warren and Mahoney, explores the importance of Indigenous knowledge, design rooted in place, and the power of collective thinking in shaping meaningful, enduring projects.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
Powerhouse Parramatta has commissioned more than 50 leading designers from across Australia to shape the spaces and experiences of the new museum, including public, exhibition, restaurant and retail spaces.
Scheduled to open later this year on the banks of the Parramatta River, the 30,000-square-metre Powerhouse museum — designed by Moreau Kusunoki in collaboration with Genton — represents a major shift in the geography of Sydney’s cultural infrastructure.