Chill out with Draga & Aurel’s Zen collection, where multi-colored, pastel-hued light refractions are captured in ice-like coffee tables.
Inspired by the grand and sculptural volumes of industrial silos containers, Studiopepe creates the Silos family of contemporary low tables for Uniqka.
Foscarini collaborates on HABITUS, an experimental lighting project created with Andrea Anastasio + Amal with no imposed boundaries.
Studio Booboon debuts the Rabbit Chair + the Silhouette Chair, a pair of curvy, minimalist seats as part of the Playful Reappropriation exhibition.
NOOM's HELLO furniture collection is playful yet sophisticated featuring a geometric-inspired chair, low chair, three-seater sofa, and two coffee tables.
Discover Fornace Brioni's subtle alchemy of water, earth, and fire as they produce the cotto cladding from the finest clays on the Po River floodplain, seen in the Grounded exhibition.
Flack Studio + Volker Haug's collaborative Me and You lighting collection uses limited materials to show off their inherent beauty.
Kiki Goti's contemplative showcase Selene demonstrates design’s potential to shift perceptions of the foyer through home furnishings.
Decades after La Grande Muraglia, a furniture collection by Mario Bellini + Piero Ambrogio Busnelli was introduced; it's been reimagined by NEUTRA for outdoors.
The Sparking Change installation, presented by Roca + designed by Mario Cucinella Architects, embodies the principles of circularity + decarbonization in ceramics manufacturing.
Faye Toogood debuted two new collections at the Rude Arts Club exhibition in Milan: the Cosmic furniture collection with Tacchini + Rude rugs with cc-tapis.
We’ve picked 11 of our favorite designers to watch, installations that made us think, and pieces we’d love to own from Milan Design Week 2024.
Designed by Sabine Marcelis, these blown glass tables in smokey gray and amber captivate your eyes with their reflective qualities.
The Design Duo Double Feature exhibition invited 6 pairs of designers to explore duality using FENIX's dual-use furnishing elements.
Each element of the Erosion collection is carved from a single block of marble and exemplifies the results of superior, hyper-precise craftsmanship.