"Sometimes You're Just Not Going to Find What You Need" — Why Designers Maddux Creative Turn to Bespoke Design, and the Lessons They've Learned Along the Way

With the launch of Maison by Maddux Creative this month, interior designer Jo leGleud explains the joy of exploring bespoke furniture and decor design with clients

a retro living room with a timber clad roof and a pink curved sofa with patterned sheers
(Image credit: Maddux Creative)

What do you do if you can't find that absolutely perfect piece of furniture to fit your room? Well, if you've got the budget, and British interior designers like Jo leGleud and Scott Maddux in your corner, then you commission it from scratch. The ability to go bespoke with any element of your home's furnishings — anything from a sofa down to a cabinet pull — isn't something that's in every interior designer's arsenal, but for the founders of Maddux Creative, it's something that's been part of their projects for a long time.

Now, the design studio has launched Maison by Maddux Creative, a platform which, for the first time, brings some of their bespoke pieces they've worked on over the past 14 years to a wider market. "When you install these pieces in a project, someone always inevitably says, 'This is beautiful, where can I buy one?'" Jo tells me over a Zoom call, sat among the team in her studio. "Now, we have that platform."

The 'Forma' pattern, seen here as a room divider now available at Maison by Maddux Creative, started life as a bas-relief decorated wall at Holland Park House.

(Image credit: Maddux Creative)

As someone who works in the design world, I'm acutely aware of how much great design is already out there — so, I wonder, what set of circumstances comes about that the design studio needs to turn to custom furniture design?

"Our projects often reference vintage and antique furniture, because we like adding that layer of patina and interest," Jo says, "and sometimes you find something and it's perfect, but it's not the right size. So we've always had this team of people that can help us fulfill those kinds of briefs."

"Sometimes, there are certain pieces where you just say, we're not going to find what we need," Jo admits. "The great thing is that it really does make you think about what the precise detailing needs to be." When you're building a design from scratch, there's no need for compromise.

a dining room with sheer patterned curtains in a large home

The same Forma pattern has been turned into a sheer fabric as part of the collection.

(Image credit: Maddux Creative)

Jo also loves the opportunity to do something "fantastical" through bespoke pieces as a personal collaboration with a client. "You're going on this journey with someone, and you get to know them, and their own obsessions, really well. What's in there, it's my job to bring it out, and that's what makes people's home really unique," the designer explains. "That's our ethos — to tune into what the character of a client, or family is, and work out: what do we want to do with that?"

"Obviously, this comes at a certain price point, and you have to have a client who's willing to go through the process and be totally on board with the whole idea, understanding why it's necessary," Jo adds.

Not all the pieces, however, are born out of a 'need', or as a reaction to a specific property that needs problem-solving. Some of the Maison by Maddux Creative pieces were realized through purer creative exploits. The fungi-like Curio hardware was born from a collaboration during Maddux Creative's 2023 turn at Design Centre Chelsea Harbour's WOW!house, in a fantastical space that was almost alive with pieces that felt like mycelium networks, and the ceiling like the gills of a mushroom.

a sketch of a fringed pouffe and the real design

The Shimmy Stool was developed from a photoshoot sample into a final product for a client's bathroom.

(Image credit: Maddux Creative)

The Shimmy Stool, another highlight of the first raft of Maison by Maddux Creative designs, was another that had a less conventional advent. "I did a collection of trimmings with Samuel and Son a few years ago, and we had the pleasure of working with Miranda Sinclair to do the styling on the shoot," Jo recounts. "We made this little stool for the shoot, and a client really liked it — developed it a little bit and made it more usable in her bathroom, where it takes center stage." What was meant to be a simple showcase for a trim took on a new life all of its own.

a sketch of a wall light and production sampes

The designers play an integral part of this production process, too.

(Image credit: Maddux Creative)

Of course, the task of creating bespoke furniture designs doesn't begin and end with the designers. It requires teams of craftspeople, in this case working across diverse mediums, to bring the imagined concepts to life.

Scott's background is in architecture, and Jo's is in textile design and embroidery, so both designers have a strong relationship with the process of how things are made, just from a very different point of view. "That's my favorite part of what we do, just be able to be really involved with the makers," Jo says. "That conversation of understanding how they're doing something and why they're doing it, getting into the mindset that makes you excited about designing something."

a large living room with a curved sofa and a gridded, patterned ceiling

Maddux Creative's Circa Sofa has been seen in several of the studio's projects.

(Image credit: Maddux Creative)

This, it's important to point out, is just the inaugural collection for Maison by Maddux Creative — a small curation of the designers' original designs that set the stage for what they aim to achieve with the platform. Jo describes Maison as having a "natural life", made up of further bespoke pieces from the studio's previous projects, alongside one-off vintage designs, and potentially even collaborations, bringing a spotlight to emerging designers.

"Whether it's our own designs, collaborations with brands such as Samuel and Sons, or ways that we'd work with new designers, it has to be that it could have only been created with us, that it has our voice in it."

Hugh is Livingetc.com’s editor. With 8 years in the interiors industry under his belt, he has the nose for what people want to know about re-decorating their homes. He prides himself as an expert trend forecaster, visiting design fairs, showrooms and keeping an eye out for emerging designers to hone his eye. He joined Livingetc back in 2022 as a content editor, as a long-time reader of the print magazine, before becoming its online editor. Hugh has previously spent time as an editor for a kitchen and bathroom magazine, and has written for “hands-on” home brands such as Homebuilding & Renovating and Grand Designs magazine, so his knowledge of what it takes to create a home goes beyond the surface, too. Though not a trained interior designer, Hugh has cut his design teeth by managing several major interior design projects to date, each for private clients. He's also a keen DIYer — he's done everything from laying his own patio and building an integrated cooker hood from scratch, to undertaking plenty of creative IKEA hacks to help achieve the luxurious look he loves in design, when his budget doesn't always stretch that far.