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If the market’s latest debuts have any lesson to tell, it’s that the design community indeed works better together. From actress Diane Keaton collaborating with homewares haven Hudson Grace to Missoni Home’s vivacious rug series with Stark, brands across categories are coming together to bring thoughtful new offerings to designers’ tool kits. Looking for the latest in furniture, decor, lighting, and beyond? Meet the industry’s latest dynamic duos.
Missoni Home x Stark
Saturated hues and edgy motifs define Missoni knitwear, and those vibrant hallmarks of the Italian luxury fashion house have spawned yet another timeless collection with Stark, a relationship dating back to 2005. The lineup features Layers, which reinterprets Missoni’s iconic zigzags in rich jewel tones, and a quartet of hand-knotted silk and wool creations crafted in Nepal: ombré Scratch, graphic Bleached, plus Deep Stripe and Nastri, both flaunting metallic yarn accents.
Diane Keaton x Hudson Grace
Actress Diane Keaton has resided in numerous—and often AD-featured—homes over the decades, from a Spanish Colonial Revival she restored in Beverly Hills to a getaway Southwestern retreat in Arizona to the brick Sullivan Canyon dwelling that is the protagonist of her book The House That Pinterest Built. Keaton’s commitment to living amid memorable design has now culminated in a largely monochromatic range of tableware, bedding, décor, and pet accessories that captures her enduring, low-frill aesthetic. A reclaimed teak wood stool, for instance, is ideal for piling up striped, plaid, and checkered Alpaca throws, while a ceramic polka-dot ice bucket crafted in Italy and splattered Portuguese stoneware plates are bound to make a splash at dinner parties.
Honey Collins Interiors x O. Henry House
Interior designer Honey Collins roves between Atlanta and Boston, so naturally her elegant aesthetic is shaped by living in the disparate cities. Take her capsule collection for family-owned North Carolina upholsterer O. Henry House: Its four pieces are rife with subtle details that fuse classic and contemporary Southern and New England style, like the tapered block feet peeking out of the Dunmore sofa’s rippled fabric or the floral cushion topping the arched Buckhead ottoman. A shirred skirt and buttons adorn the swiveling Susu chair, and the JW Club chair pairs pleated rolled arms with turned spindle legs.
Design Within Reach x Beni Rugs
Following buzzy collaborations with Athena Calderone, Colin King, and more, Beni has embarked on its inaugural retail partnership with Design Within Reach. Four rug and runner offerings—Brick, Borderline, Backgammon, and Fences—are available in stock for the first time, offering designers exceptionally fast lead times. Handwoven in Morocco with humanely shorn wool from Atlas Mountain sheep, the rugs illuminate loosely geometric prints, attractively varying lengths, and piles tinted in shades of earthy oat, sienna, and desert rose.
Michael Graves Design x Pottery Barn
In 2022, Pottery Barn rolled out its Accessible Home range, reinforcing the notion that beauty need not be sacrificed for functionality and safety. The stalwart retailer continues the conversation with a new bedroom collection by Michael Graves Design, a firm dedicated to furthering health care and mobility design—among many other architectural feats—after its namesake architect and designer became paralyzed in 2003. Along with introducing the new Bradford and Yardley chairs, which support sit-to-rise movement, the team tweaked Pottery Barn’s beloved Cayman, Sausalito, and Farmhouse lines to better accommodate individuals with disabilities or who are aging. Beds are equipped with Pull & Roll side grips, nightstands sport high edges that keep small objects in place, and dressers are designed with a nine-inch ground clearance for the ease of wheelchair users.
Harrods Interior Design x Cole & Son
Multidisciplinary practice Harrods Interior Design, situated on the third floor of the storied London department store of the same name, has teamed up with fellow British heritage brand Cole & Son on the Couture Carousel collection. As an homage to the 175th anniversary of Harrods, the mica-finished wallpapers reimagine watercolor illustrations from Harrods catalogue covers of yore in a palette of crisp, fashionable hues—lavender, China blue, and grayscale included. The croquis drawings, highlighting fashions that span the glamorous 1950s to experimental 1990s, are backdropped by its famous windows and weave in pearls and poodles that reference the luxe retailer’s jewelry rooms and bygone pet spa.
Jiang Qiong Er x Roche Bobois
Drawing from meditative Chinese lounges, Shanghai- and Paris-based designer Jiang Qiong Er has contrived the poetic Bamboo Mood collection for Roche Bobois. Employing rejuvenating shades of celadon and coral, the collection exhibits the fluid lines that pervade Asian decorative arts and simultaneously evoke the ensemble’s namesake grass. The sinuous shape of the plump sofa and armchair, both covered in a subtly nubby upholstery, pairs with the collection’s undulating rug, the intriguingly slanted and high-gloss vases, and occasional tables.
Jinny Blom x Mylands
London-based landscape architect Jinny Blom’s love for foliage has sparked the latest range from historic British paint manufacturer Mylands. The 12 nature-inspired shades handpicked by Blom are aptly meant for outdoor settings and run the gamut from fresh green Sprig, ideal for sprucing up alfresco furniture, to warm black Woodnight, ripe for invigorating utilitarian hinges and handles. Others have more personal roots: Mineral-red Blomster, for example, is an ode to the farmhouses Blom was surrounded by during her time in Denmark, and Rain is a tribute to Arbutus x andrachnoides, Blom’s favorite hybrid-strawberry tree.
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