Ingoldby Needlepoint Cushion

£145.00
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Bursting with colour and full of intricate detail, our new Disrupted Geometrics Collection reimagines classic geometric forms through a contemporary lens. Unapologetically bold, yet considered, the collection is playful in spirit while remaining sophisticated, exploring the tension between order and interruption. 

The Ingoldby is a bold and vibrant experiment with colour and form - its rich palette both harmonises and contrasts, creating deliberate moments of tension throughout the piece. 

Designed in-house, the Disrupted Geometrics Collection was developed to create meaningful opportunities for skill development. With the Ingoldby, stitchers have mastered Long-armed cross stitch to create contrasting textures on the vertical plane. The orange and blue colours are found in slightly different shades in order to at once draw the eye and disrupt. 


This cushion is perfect as a statement in its own right, but it was also designed to sit alongside the Tetford and Burstow - why not collect them all?! 
  • Size(inches): 17x17
  • Size(cm): 44x44
  • Feather cushion included. Needlepoint in wool. Dry clean only. 
  • Backed with dark indigo 100% linen
  • 3/4 zip closure
Stitched by prisoners and prison leavers.
Handcrafted from the finest natural fibres
9 months or more of dedicated craftsmanship

UK delivery starts at £3 and is completely free for orders over £200.

We also offer international delivery.

We hope you'll be delighted by your new Fine Cell Work items, but just in case you're not, there are several circumstances in which we will refund your purchase, subject to the item being returned within 30 days of receipt.

Crafting wonders

Our production process

Each of our products goes on a long and impactful journey before it is ready to be sold. And every one of our items touches the life of at least one prisoner or prison leaver in some way.

Our needlework kits are put together in our prison workshops before being distributed from our London hub to our wonderful volunteers. These inspirational supporters teach people in prison the necessary skills to craft each piece. The completed stitchwork is then returned to us, to ensure it meets our exacting standards, before finally being sent back into a prison to be 'made up', turning it into the final product (e.g. stuffing and adding zips to cushions).

In total, this process can take up to 200 hours and over 70,000 stitches (per piece!)

We know that every single one of our products boosts self-esteem, builds confidence, has a positive impact on a stitcher’s mental health, and gives them the opportunity to transform their lives.

By purchasing a product, you become a part of that journey.

DONATIONS

Support our work

By purchasing from Fine Cell Work, you are making social change. However, 75% of our rehabilitation programmes are funded through donations and grants. We know that transformation is possible - for our stitchers, for our communities, and for our society as a whole. Your support - through donations or by purchasing products - will help to break the devastating cycle of reoffending and repeated imprisonment.

£10 donation
Provides a prisoner with the materials for one tapestry cushion (100 hours of creative activity). 

£20 donation
Will enable us to continue providing paid, creative and productive work to even more prisoners around the UK, helping them to build a brighter future.

£50 donation
Sponsors a prisoner to train as a volunteer 'class coordinator', teaching and mentoring other prisoners.

£250 donation
Covers the volunteer costs of a stitching class in prison.

£500 donation
Pays for the training, materials and support for one prisoner for an entire year, helping them to rebuild a meaningful, independent,crime-free life.

By giving prisoners hope that transformation is truly possible, they can envision a meaningful life after release. But nobody tells the story of how Fine Cell Work has helped them better than the prisoners themselves:

“Stitching allows me to use a totally different part of my brain and personality. I can move away from the more difficult reflections and anxieties and feel creative and purposeful. This means I no longer feel that my life has come to a halt and that I am of no use to anyone else.”

- Tom, FCW Stitcher -