The Best Custom Upholsterer in Dallas


(Photography by Rebecca Sherman)
A chair awaits reupholstery at Marroquin Custom Upholstery




It's about time... I've been writing about beautiful rooms for magazines for many years, and it's usually the designers who get most of the attention in a story. But designers are the first to tell you it's the behind-the-scenes artisans whose work can make or break a room, a whole project, and even their reputations.

CUSTOM UPHOLSTERERS in particular work non-stop the week before a magazine photo shoot to get things camera ready, sometimes for free for their favorite design clients. The best ones donate their time and talent for show houses. For a variety of reasons, upholsterers almost never get the credit they deserve: Space is limited in print magazines and there's rarely enough room to mention the supporting cast on a project. Understandably, designers often won't divulge who their upholsters are; they're afraid others might steal them or that they'll get so overrun with new business they won't have time for their regular customers.



But upholsterers are the unsung heros behind some of the most dazzling homes in the country. The refined, highly skilled detail work, often referred to as dressmaker details, are perfected by the best of the best and can make a plain piece of furniture sing.




Marroquin Custom Upholstery's work shop is a
whopping 55,000 square feet


THE BEST OF THE BEST
Marroquin Custom Upholstery, owned by Jesus Marroquin and his family, is arguably among the top upholsterers in the country. He's the secret design weapon of Dallas designers Emily Summers, John Bobbitt, Paul Garzotto, and Betty Lou Phillips, all who are regular customers.

"I describe Marroquin as the De Angelis of the Southwest," says John Bobbitt of the legendary New York upholstery family used by Peter Marino and the like. "Marroquin is capable of executing any kind of custom detail that I can come up with. They're especially good with difficult upholstery like horsehair, leather, and suede, and with fine nailhead designs, historic detailing and antique furniture."

Jesus Marroquin oversees every piece himself and is notoriously picky and obsessive. "He won't rush a piece even if you're standing over him screaming," says Bobbitt with a laugh. "I have to say though, they always get things done on time."




A chair await new life at Marroquin Custom Upholstery


FROM THE WHITE HOUSE TO YOUR HOUSE
After producing a custom line of furniture for 21 years for a top Dallas showroom (many of Marroquin's pieces ended up in the White House and Camp David), Marroquin has recently moved on and, in addition to reupholstery work, is partnering with Nancy Caperton on a line of furniture at CULP ASSOCIATES called the Caperton Collection.

You don't have to be a designer to bring your furniture to be reupholstered by Marroquin, and they'll help you design a custom piece from scratch, with or without your designer.






Jesus Marroquin, owner of Marroquin Custom Upholstery


DALLAS WAS HIS DREAM
Jesus Marroquin was 23 years old when he came to America in 1973, and like most immigrants from Mexico, he came across the river. A priest picked him up in his car and asked where he was going. "I said Dallas. I just liked the sound of it," says Marroquin, who by then already had years of training and experience with some of the top furniture upholsterers in Mexico City. Soon, he started working with well-known Highland Park upholsterer Art Jones and his son Robert. By the time Marroquin left ten years later to start his own reupholstery company, they'd produced a line of furniture and opened 20 showrooms across the country.

Marroquin married wife Elsa in 1980, and their four children, Monica, Ivan, Adrian, and Andres, now work in the family business, doing a variety of jobs from marketing to accounting, shipping, and designing. All of them have trained on the floor, learning how to upholster furniture to their father's exacting standards. "You can't expect to be upstairs on the computer taking orders if you don't know how a chair is done," says Ivan, 27.




A custom chair in progress.
Everything is meticulously hand finished.


SWEAT THE SMALL STUFF
Marroquin bought a 55,000 square foot warehouse space near the Design District in 1999. Depending on demand and the economy, they employ between 45 and 20 full time people, including head tailors, seamstresses, carpenters, tanners, painters, and master upholsterers. Some have been with Marroquin for 26 years. "It takes five years to train people to do the quality we require, and we always start with ones who already have a lot of experience and knowledge," says Jesus. "Quality is the biggest thing for us, and it takes time to train employees to understand that. It's easy to just let the little things go. It's a lot harder to find the flaws that the clients won't see."




Daybeds, chairs, and stools waiting to be reupholstered.
Marroquin often tears a piece down to its frame,
rebuilding it if necessary and
completely redoing the springs and webbing.




IT TAKES A VILLAGE
On average five people will work on a single piece of furniture to be reupholstered. "The team works together otherwise we couldn't do it," says Jesus. "But I'm involved in everything, even the smallest piece that comes in." Each employee has years, if not decades, of experience specializing in a particular detail of work, including springs, nailheads, skirts, button tufting, refinishing, and making frames.



Marroquin's seamstresses are experienced in working
with expensive anddifficult fabrics from
Fortuny to leather to horsehair.




BEFORE/AFTER


A faded settee from the 1970s gets a makeover,
including new springs, webbing, foam core with down wrap.




Master upholsterer Luis Lopez has been
working for Marroquin five years.



Marroquin oversees the tufting and shirring done on the settee.


AFTER: Meticulously executed, the settee is transformed into a
glamorous piece worthy of Rita Hayworth.




Tools of the trade





Precise and exquisite, it's the dressmaker
details

that are Marroquin's specialty




Charming details on a custom chair



Ottoman from the Caperton Collection now at CULP ASSOCIATES

Sofas from Marroquin's custom collection



At left, master upholsterer and 26-year veteran Jose Marroquin
cuts buffalo hide to fit a club chair. At rightmaster
upholsterer Luis Lopez works on a chaise.



Alberto DeHoyos, an apprentice carpenter and upholsterer,
hammers nailhead trim on a custom sofa for John Bobbitt,
which was used in the Fort Worth's Designer Showhouse.



Designer Paul Garzotto pulls fabric from
thousands of leftover yardage in stock at Marroquin's workshop.




From left, master upholsterers Ricardo Aquilar and Jose Valderas,
who has worked for Marroquin 26 years.
Here, Valderas isfitting fabric to the curvature of a chair,
similar to how a tailor fits a suit to a body.




Master painter and finisher Fernando Robles
puts the final touches on a frame for a custom ottoman




Master Upholsterer Terry Balka works on a pair
of chairs. He's been with Marroquin 9 years.



Every piece of furniture, old or new, gets 8-way hand-tied springs
that will last at least 20 years.


This hand-operated machine is the traditional way
to cover buttons for tufted upholstery




Marroquin has more than 150 different styles of chairs,
sofas, and ottomans ready to be made.

"The key is to build the frame exactly right. After that, no problem," says Jesus, who can make any custom design you want from a photograph or sketch.




Every piece of furniture is photographed and documented
by Ivan Marroquin in the company's photo studio.

Once a piece is documented, it's ready to be crated and shipped (depending on how far it's going). They ship to Europe, South America, Mexico, Dubai and beyond.





The Marroquins pose for a family portrait.
Top left, Monica with Godzilla, Adrian,
Ivan, Elsa, and Jesus (not pictured: Andres)

"One of my dreams when I came to this country was to do furniture for the White House, and I did furniture for the White House," says Jesus, who became a naturalized American citizen in 1986. "Another dream I had was to have a beautiful wife. I am not so handsome, but I got a beautiful wife. And I dreamed to have really good kids, and I got them. I also dreamed to build this company and this facility. As you see, I came to America with nothing but a lot of dreams, but this country took me in and kept me. I made a success of my life. For a Mexican like me, this is the American dream."

To view more of their custom furniture and to contact them, go to marroquincustomuph.com.






New Sponsor: Duxiana!


Dux beds have been made in Sweden since 1926

How Swede it is...DUXIANA Dallas, which celebrates its 15th anniversary this month, is a new sponsor of the blog, and I couldn't be more excited!

The backstory of how owner SERENA COLE discovered Duxiana beds is a charming one:



Duxiana owner Serena Cole


Sleeping In
In 1995, the south Texas-born Cole was employed by the British government helping English companies set up operations in America. "This was before the Internet, when people needed help finding distributors and warehouses," says Cole, who traveled for months at a time in Europe, pre-kids (she and husband Michael now have a girl in middle school and a boy in high school).

At one point, Michael joined her in Europe for vacation, and they ended up in Copenhagen without reservations. The local travel office sent them to a hotel near TIVOLI GARDENS. After placing a wake-up call request to the front desk, they plopped down on the mattress for a short nap.




Duxiana's Preston Center store


Princess and the Pea
"We slept for 18 hours straight," remembers Cole. "It was the best night's sleep we'd ever had. It wasn't jet lag, we'd been in Europe already for two weeks." Michael, who'd suffered from sleep disorders for years, was even scheduled to go to a special clinic when he returned to the States.

They immediately stripped the bed down to the mattress to see what kind it was. "Whatever it was we wanted to buy it," she says. But the mattress didn't have a label. So they went down to the lobby to ask. "They were all laughing because they'd been trying to wake us up for hours, but couldn't. They'd been calling and even knocked on the door."




The most popular sheets sold at Duxiana are made
from spun bark from beechwood trees in Switzerland.
Densely woven and lightweight, they come straight from the washer
and dryer wrinkle-free, if you can imagine.


Back to the Future
The hotel's staff explained that the mattress which had put them into such a deep sleep was a Duxiana. Soon, the Coles were loaded up on a hydroplane to Sweden to tour the Dux factory. They bought a queen mattress, and one thing led to another, with a Dux rep suggesting they open a store in Dallas where the couple was living.

Fast forward to 2011: Cole still owns her original Dux bed, and the original Berkshire Lane store in Preston Center is still thriving. "I tell people that a Dux bed lasts about 20 to 25 years," says Cole. "But I have a client in east Texas whose bed is 75 years old. It belonged to her mother, who brought it with her from Sweden."





Duxiana uses beautiful fabrics milled in Europe that are wider than
U.S. textiles for its custom bedding. Standard Dux King mattresses
are even bigger than California Kings.



1.25 Miles of Swedish Steel
What makes a Dux bed so amazing that it not only cured the Coles' insomnia, but it can last for almost a century? Much of it can be attributed to the 1.25 miles of Swedish steel used to create the continuous spring system, says Cole, which distributes body weight evenly and eliminates pressure points. "It's like the man who walks on a bed of nails," she adds. "He can do it because his weight is evenly distributed."

All their mattresses are topped with a removable pad made from natural latex from rubber trees. Replace the topper every 5 years, says Cole, and the mattress can last almost indefinitely. Dux mattresses are self-framed with strong pine grown in the northern region of Sweden, and are made to fit into your existing bed frame and attach to any headboard.

Dux beds are used in hotels all over the world, including the 137-year-old Grand Hotel in Stockholm, by appointment to H.M. the King of Sweden.




Tapestry pillows at Duxianan are made in Italy.


The Bigger the Better
While the biggest mattress made in the U.S. (unless you're going for bespoke) is a California King sized 82" x 84", a Dux-made made King is a roomy 83" x 83". That makes them immensely popular in Dallas where everything is bigger. Bonus: Cole has a warehouse stocked with Dux beds and European-sized sheets to fit the King mattresses, so there's never any wait.

No slow boat from Sweden, in other words.




Duxiana's Sensitive Towels organic and completely biodegradable


A Good Yarn
Says Cole: "Sensitive Towels are made of 100% of the finest combed long staple cotton, hand picked in Egypt. The yarn has been ring-spun. The fabric's wrap consists of twisted yarn and long loops, and a newly developed dobby creates a modern and sporty look. Made from 100% recyclable materials, including the label, and thread. They feature a high absorbency from the first use, and natural ingredients prevent musty odors, and are available in 16 colors and 7 sizes. Cradle to Cradle, Gold Certified."




Duxiana linen wash



Under Control
For those who want to read, work, and remain in bed as long a possible, there's the adjustable Axion bed, pictured below, that allows you and your partner to adjust your own side. The King is made up of two twin mattresses, each with its own control. It's the most popular bed among the 30-and-40-something set, who are just discovering the virtues of autonomous settings, says Cole.

Dux beds start at $5,000 for a Queen and $12,500 for a King.





Axion Bed

Kyle Bunting's New Hide Wall Coverings!


Love this....a few days ago KYLE BUNTING launched his first-ever collection of hide wall coverings. His studios are based in the Texas Hill Country, around Austin, but in Dallas you can find them at DAVID SUTHERLAND SHOWROOM.




Kyle Bunting's hair-on-hide wall panels



The hair-on-hide wall coverings come in tiles, rolls, and panels...



David Hicks-inspired wall coverings by Kyle Bunting