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The best debuts at Paris Design Week 2025
Paris Design Week 2025 showcased a diverse array of innovative and luxurious home decor and furniture designs from various international brands and designers. The event featured installations and new product launches across different venues, including Maison&Objet; and Déco Off, attracting interior design professionals and enthusiasts.
Pierre Frey transformed the historic Hôtel de Guise into an immersive experience, presenting its first in-house furniture line, the sand-dune-inspired Déserts collection, and Chroma, a plush cotton velvet created in collaboration with India Mahdavi. The installation was enveloped in scenography by French artist Elizabeth Leriche, showcasing a rich array of patterns and textures.
Design Rendezvous, a pop-up on Rue Guénard, featured collaborative works. Jiun Ho's Piedra chair was displayed with JG Switzer’s hand-felted upholstery, alongside Sarah Von Dreele’s metallic cork Ascend wallcovering, and Parete’s new collaboration with Scottish rug designer Wendy Morrison, highlighting unique textures and artistic expressions.
Lala Curio's founder, Laura Cheung Wolf, unveiled the Feuillage collection at her private home. This couture-quality series of 10 intricately detailed wall panels, inspired by Japan's Yakushima Island, included designs like Fuki, Cabinet of Curiosities, and the namesake Feuillage, which incorporated wooden beadwork, raffia, and paillettes.
Faye Toogood, named Maison&Objet;’s Designer of the Year 2025, presented “Womanifesto!”, a four-part retrospective. The exhibition featured archival furniture in surrealistic settings, such as drawing-room-inspired spaces with anthropometric lounge chairs and a forest-themed room adorned with tree-sized cardboard sunflowers and Toogood’s Woodlands wallcovering for Calico Wallpaper.
Samuel & Sons collaborated with passementerie artist Elizabeth Ashdown for the vibrant Kaleidoscope collection. This line included 12 bold, multitonal woven designs, such as pom-pom fringes, scalloped braids, and tasseled borders, all crafted using centuries-old passementerie techniques.
Tai Ping unveiled the Nakashima Edition, a collection of rugs that reimagines two original George Nakashima rug prototypes from 1959. The eight distinct designs included Migration I, Dark Moon II, and Bird Star II, paying homage to the late American architect and woodworker.
De Gournay’s new introductions at Déco Off were inspired by avant-garde fashion designer Paul Poiret. The collections featured designs like the stippled, gilded silk Dunand and Pietra Dura, a colorful, vignette-style wallcovering accented with hand-painted blooms and birds, designed to evoke inlaid marble.
Dedar showcased new textile designs, including the kid-mohair-covered Thank You for Sending Me an Angel velvet, the cloud-flecked Lilaz, and Queneau, a water-repellent wool satin available in over two dozen colorways.
Aux Abris founder Karen Robert introduced the Alchemy collection, an old-world-style series printed on gleaming metal leaf grounds. Highlights included the Japanese mural-inspired Paradiso, the Italian Renaissance–driven Palazzo, the marbled Cosmo, and the olive-dotted Martini.
The Pollack|Weitzner apartment featured playful patterns, with Pollack’s rhythmic Open Studio series and Spring 2025 additions to the Spring Street line. Lori Weitzner presented her Moorish architecture–inspired Alhambra as Muse collection, which included the polychromatic printed velvet, Intrigue.
Zoffany’s previews attracted a notable crowd. The Indienne collection showcased block-print designs and collaborations with artists Charlie Calder-Potts and Melissa White. Upcoming launches included the historically informed Rare Textiles series and the pattern-rich Domino Velvets line.
Féau Boiseries celebrated its 150th anniversary with a showcase from The Invisible Collection. The exhibition featured new Garcé & Dimofski–designed floorcoverings from Beni Rugs, sculptural pieces by Indian designer Ashiesh Shah, and newly acquired pieces from Mobilier National, such as Maison Leleu’s Panter chair.
Fabricut presented Barry Dixon’s Elysium collection for Vervain, featuring designs like the marbleized ombre Pan Atlas, the pastoral Birds & Bittervine, and Cacao Nut, an enchanting trim with egg-shaped pom-poms.
Schumacher’s showroom featured artisanal beauty, including a collection of fabric-sheathed light fixtures by French ceramist Elsa Foulon and a botanical fabric design, Flemish Tapestry, based on a 17th-century Belgian tapestry.
Ralph Lauren Home released the Rue Bohème collection, a range of runway-ready textiles available through Designers Guild. The line, inspired by the fashion designer’s Spring 2024 fashion collection, included distressed cotton-linen florals, silk-blend ticking stripes, paint-splattered velvets, and botanical embroideries.
CMO Paris introduced designs from its 2025 collection, including the braided Bamboo Petit Chevron wallcovering, the sheer, hand-spun Cashmere Degradé curtain fabric, and Wild Water Lily, a serene mural fashioned from all-natural aquatic fibers.
Giobagnara showcased its latest designs, including Kelly Wearstler’s leather-accented Maris line, Glenn Sestig’s minimalist walnut Tanell bar table, and an Elie Saab monogram-stamped folding side table.
The Vale London’s founder, Melinda Marquardt, unveiled the Maddox line, an homage to Bauhaus pioneers. The primary-color-drenched collection included 16 designs, such as the zigzagging Diana Stripe fabric, the Roman Holiday wallcovering, and the geometric Charlie upholstery.
Belgian wallcoverings brand Omexco launched three collections: Light at Night, with 10 glimmering metallic designs like Stardust; Oase, featuring nine textural paper-weave patterns; and Pure, comprising a dozen soothing monochrome styles like Sensitive and Refined Earth.
French furniture designer Franck Genser introduced the Morse series at his Parisian showroom apartment. The three-piece collection featured walrus-inspired designs, including a marble-topped coffee table with tusk-shaped legs and an iridescent neoprene-upholstered settee with a coordinating armchair.
Arte’s Luster collection showcased four ultradimensional wall designs hand-inlaid with pearlescent capiz shells: Perula, Lucea, Abalone, and Cornice, available in multiple hues.
Uchronia’s “What’s New? In Hospitality” installation, designed by Julien Sebban, featured a retro-fueled aesthetic with a hand-curated color palette by Tonester Paints. The display included a round, 1970s-style bed by Treca Paris and Diesel Living’s dinnerware for Seletti.
L’Objet collaborated with South African artist Ruan Hoffmann for a highly collectible ceramic line. The 13 playful pieces, adorned with 24-karat gold finishes, included the three-dimensional Love You More plate and a three-wick candle with a mask-like lid.
These debuts collectively demonstrated a trend towards luxurious materials, artisanal craftsmanship, historical inspirations, and bold artistic expressions, offering a comprehensive glimpse into the future of interior design.
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