Ruché Sofa
On a walk through Ligne Roset’s factory near Lyon, France, we track the multitude of steps, hands, and hours required to craft this very refined couch.

Despite its relatively simple-looking form, the Ruché is a highly labor-intensive piece of furniture, requiring a diverse range of craftspeople and talents.
The family-owned company has been making furniture in this location for 38 years. On a recent fall afternoon, the cavernous Briord 1 factory was running full throttle, all the workers focused on turning out French designer Inga Sempé’s Ruché sofa, introduced in 2010 and already iconic. The sofa’s simple form—a slim beech frame draped with a cushiony quilt—belies the effort it takes to produce one: ten-and-a-half hours of labor and up to 11 different craftspeople’s hands.
“When you see a finished object, you can rarely imagine all the work that went in to it,” muses Sempé. “All the sleepless nights for the designer, who stays up thinking about just one curve, all the people who built it.” We tour Ligne Roset’s factory to learn just what it takes to make a Ruché.
1. The Frame

Any wood waste generated in Ligne Roset’s manufacturing process is used to heat the company’s factories in the winter. Leather scraps are sold to make boots and wallets.


Left: A technician in a ventilator mask who sprays the wood with a transparent stain or varnish.
Right: When an order comes in, workers feed the wood into a high-tech preprogrammed machine that mills it into ten square-sided posts and drills holes where the pieces will connect.
2. The Foam

Stacks of foam await their fates.


Left: Each hue indicates a different density and use.
Right: A technician sprays a sheet of pliable purple memory foam with a water-based adhesive and then carefully folds it over the other two foam layers and a steel spring grill to complete the backrest.
3. The Cover

A seamstress mans the automated Gerber Cutter, which cuts patterns precisely and in a way that minimizes wasted fabric.


Left: Then the pieces get stretched, quilted, and joined by a cavalcade of sewers, each with their own discrete task.
Right: Sewers stitch zippers on to the cover’s edges to enable it to attach securely to the wooden sofa frame.
4. The Final Assembly

The physically taxing job of assembling the final product is most frequently handled by men in the factory, but Laurence is a nimble, notable exception. After assembling the sofa and fluffing the cover she readies it for shipping and boxes it up.
Click here for an extended look at designer Inga Sempe's creative process.
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This was so fun to see. My husband and I own an upholstery shop in Napa. It's much harder to do custom upholstery than people realize. Thanks for sharing!
This looks so cozy! And I love that color
We purchased the Ruche Sofa and love it. It is the most comfortable sofa we ever owned. Cozy is the perfect word. Great for entertaining or just relaxing with a good book.
Availability and price anyone, please?
@ Irving, The prices and availability depend upon the fabric you choose. If you are here in North America, here's the link to Ruché on our website: http://www.ligne-roset-usa.com/Products/living/sofas/Ruche_1701.aspx There you'll find the price range for each element in the Ruché collection. You can then visit your nearest Ligne Roset retailer to experience Ruché in person, ask questions, and place an order. We're excited that you love the piece-we do, too!
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