Victoria Hagan x the Shade Store
Victoria Hagan’s passion for florals defines the New York– and Palm Beach–based AD100 designer’s second collection with the Shade Store. Melding neutrals with muted blues and grays, the five custom fabrics for drapery, Roman shades, and cornices include the subtly shimmering Jasmine jacquard, the luxe soft-printed velvet Petal, and Vanda, a woven abstract orchid. Views of the horizon also informed Hagan’s lightweight cotton-linen Lily and classic Casa Stripe.
Cabana x OKA
Both Martina Mondadori, founder and editor-in-chief of design magazine Cabana, and Sue Jones, cofounder and creative director of OKA, possess robust stashes of antique fabrics and objects—the springboard to their new lighting range. Beyond Pilastro, a hand-turned wood lamp that pays tribute to one Mondadori’s mother once owned, there is a trifecta of wanderlust-driven lampshades. Arabesque’s herringbone stitch tussar silk calls to mind a piece of fabric snagged in an Indian market, Veneto’s geometric pastels reimagine Venetian frescoes, and Ambi puts swirls of block-printed paisley front and center.
Temperley London x Romo
Fashion designer Alice Temperley and Romo Group’s design director Emily Mould have never shied away from maximalism. Now, the two British powerhouses have channeled their audacious predilections into fabrics, wall coverings, trimmings, and cushions that showcase such enchanting motifs as swinging monkeys and parasol-brandishing leopards cavorting against a backdrop of chinoiserie, Art Deco palm fronds, and butterfly wings that nod to the Temperley archives. Multicolored tassels and leopard-print jacquard braids bring additional jolts of caprice.
Lulama Wolf and Amber Vittoria x H&M Home
South African artist Lulama Wolf and Amber Vittoria, the US poet, artist, and author, exhibit wildly different styles, yet their human-centric designs align beautifully in the second edition of H&M Home’s For the Love of Art collection. Wolf, who investigates the precolonial African experience through a contemporary lens, has put forth an earth-toned capsule comprising a rug, jacquard blanket, stoneware serving dish, and tufted cushion covers emblazoned with eye-catching silhouettes. Vittoria, on the other hand, embellishes a tufted wool rug, velvet cushion covers, porcelain plates, and posters with abstract forms in cheerful shades of red, green, and yellow.