Maria Kipp (1900–1988) was a German-born American textile designer and engineer active in the United States from the 1920s until her death.
They settled in Los Angeles where Kipp opened a successful studio, Ernst Haeckel Handweaves, in 1926.
She founded Maria Kipp Handweaves in 1931, which specialized in handwoven furnishing fabrics for 60 years.
Neutra used Kipp's designs in his own home, as did other prominent Southern California architects such as Welton Becket, who commissioned her to create interiors for the Bullock's chain of department stores, and Paul Revere Williams, who partnered with her to create interiors for celebrity homes and the Beverly Hills Polo Lounge.
Although she was lesser known than her contemporaries Anni Albers and Dorothy Liebes, Kipp received an inaugural award for woven fabrics from the American Institute of Decorators in 1948.