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Textiles and Wallpapers Take to Both the Indoors and Outdoors at Maison&Objet as a Metaphor for Elegance
The article explores the latest textile and wallpaper trends for 2025 as previewed during Paris's Déco Off, Déco Home, and Maison&Objet; in The City events. These industry showcases highlight innovative approaches to home interiors, emphasizing both aesthetic appeal and advanced manufacturing techniques. The future of interior design, as presented by leading brands, appears focused on elegance, incorporating iridescent weaves, imaginative color palettes, and enduring earthy tones.
Rubelli's new "Teorema" collection, designed by Formafantasma, features patterns that blend traditional craftsmanship with contemporary vision. The collection introduces wool and chenille fabrics with abstract and geometric motifs, notably the "Zig Zag" line, which reimagines embroidery techniques using shiny viscose thread for a modern, textured effect, pushing boundaries in decorative textiles for home transformation.
Dedar's collections introduce material variations and new production methods within its "Contemporary Archives" family. The brand's soft figurativism enriches textiles with painterly depictions of natural elements like mountains, waterfalls, and starry skies. A highlight is the "Thank you for sending me an angel" line, crafted from kid mohair, which offers a luxurious, curly velvet texture that evokes the feel of fur without being actual fur, providing an elegant and pleasant tactile experience.
Métaphores, an Hermès textile chain brand, presents "L'Echappée" by art director Emilie Paralitici. This collection draws inspiration from travel and exploration, translating distant memories into new fabrics. It celebrates iconic English beauty with exotic and oriental influences, incorporating tweed and tartan in vibrant colors suitable for contemporary spaces. The collection also includes textured fabrics with abstract patterns reminiscent of nautical cords, designed for both indoor and outdoor applications.
Fischbacher 1819 collaborates with Marcel Wanders for the "Ancient Memories" collection, presented in Paris's Rive Droite. This line introduces an "archeology of time-traveling fabrics" that bring lightness to modern spaces. Developed with artist Caterina Roppo, the collection features decorative elements and canvases that convey poetic and emotional narratives. A notable inclusion is the "Nature's Dialogue" line, showcasing cotton lace embroidery that merges traditional craftsmanship with new technologies.
Fortuny's "Armonia" collection, created in collaboration with designer Chahan Minassian, was unveiled in an art gallery during Déco Off. This collection merges Fortuny's historical legacy with Minassian's distinctive design approach, aiming for a timeless yet forward-looking aesthetic. The resulting patterns reflect on fabric's versatility in living spaces, integrating the traditional Venetian aesthetic with contemporary artistic vision.
Lelièvre's "Métamorphose" collection emphasizes nature as an inexhaustible source of inspiration. The collection is characterized by designs that embody the rhythm of the seasons through visual and tactile patterns, delicate transitions, and blurred contours. The "Ammonite" line, for instance, features a fossil-inspired motif that connects to the origins of natural forms, refreshing the brand's aesthetic.
Élitis introduces the "Brera" collection, which pays homage to the Milanese aesthetic of neoclassical style found in historic palaces and villas, particularly those in the Porta Venezia district. The collection reintroduces printed velvets and fabrics reminiscent of sophisticated clubs, creating a theatrical and elegant atmosphere in modern homes. This collection merges themes of nature, travel, and contemporary living through its upholstery, textiles, and accessories.
Maison Pierre Frey's "Paralleles" collection explores the interplay of stripes, solid colors, and varying fabric thicknesses. The collection offers a vibrant range of palettes for contemporary homes, blending elegant, classic, and ethnic influences. The brand's installation, "Desert," presented in Paris, showcases wallpapers and fabrics that reinterpret 18th-century interiors with a modern twist, rejecting static interiors for dynamic, life-welcoming environments.
Little Greene's "Storybook Papers" collection delves into childhood nostalgia, featuring designs inspired by archival materials and 20th-century aesthetics. Curated by the National Trust, the collection transforms wooden toy designs into two-dimensional motifs for wallpapers. Each wallcovering is accompanied by suggested paint selections, making them suitable for children's bedrooms, nurseries, bathrooms, dining rooms, and entryways, refreshing and renewing home spaces.
CMO's new collections prioritize sustainability, utilizing natural fibers such as abaca, palm leaves, raffia, linen, silk, wool, and cashmere. These materials are processed using methods that blend ancient craft techniques with modern approaches. The brand focuses on preserving rare artifacts and traditional skills from remote villages, ensuring these unique practices are not lost to industrialization, thereby contributing to both design innovation and cultural heritage.
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