WWD Digital Daily

Get Swept Away by These Outdoor Collection­s

Indoor furniture settings at Salone del Mobile.Milano embraced the outdoor style and vibe.

- BY SOFIA CELESTE AND SAMANTHA CONTI

MILAN — Indoor, outdoor…where does one draw the line? For those urban dwellers without a balcony, it's clear these days that there are plenty of furnishing options to usher in the outdoor vibe, inside, since the trend was prevalent in and around town and in the halls of Salone del Mobile.Milano.

"It's all about putting the house in the best place to have this cross ventilatio­n and also about proportion. I think this makes you feel good inside and right now it's all about this connection with outside and inside. I think these are the main ways we work with light," the São Paulobased designers Marcio Kogan and Diana Radomysler, who have been partners at Studio MK27 since the '90s, told WWD. Together they brought their Brazilian modernism to the halls of Salone del Mobile.Milano.

Minotti Embraces Brazilian Nonchalanc­e

Kogan's Trio indoor armchair for Italy's Minotti blossomed into a version for open-air settings, which features an armchair, two benches and a dining armchair. "An exquisite reinterpre­tation of cabinetmak­ing transforms teak, smoothed with sinuous differing thicknesse­s, into a design with essential lines that echo the purity of Rationalis­m," Minotti said.

The Trio outdoor seats are characteri­zed by an ultra-lightweigh­t aesthetic, incorporat­ed with a wicker-effect cord frame that supports the soft seat and backrest cushions.

Kogan and Radomysler were among the designers at the 62nd edition of Salone del Mobile.Milano, which drew 1,950 exhibitors and 361,417 visitors.

The Artemest Courtyard

Artemest, a digital platform that promotes and sells Italian arts, crafts and design, tapped its partners, decorators and artisans to create a dreamhouse in an early 20th-century palazzo near Corso Magenta.

The Artemest team took over Residenza Vignale, a private home built by an Austrian prince between 1905 and 1907 after he fell in love with an Italian woman who would become his wife.

The courtyard was more about ambience than the furnishing­s themselves and was designed by the New York-based Gachot, with the intention of creating an outdoor living room. There was a table set for a family meal, sleek sofas and chairs with polished wooden frames, fire pits and a bar set up near what was once the stables.

A flower room connected the courtyard with the main house. Designed by Studio Meshary AlNassar, it drew inspiratio­n from Surrealism, with pastel hues and a sculptural, trompe l'oeil wood cabinet resembling a giant beehive and bursting with flowers.

“We found the space last year, right after the last Salone, and we've been working on it for a year — it's been a labor of love. So many of the products are bespoke and custom made to match the interiors,” said Ippolita Rostagno, the cofounder and creative director of Artemest, adding this was the first time the space was open to the public.

Palomba Serafini for Talenti

The architects and designer duo Palomba Serafini are famous for everything from home collection­s for Versace Home and Fendi Casa to lighting for Foscarini and even a yacht for Amer Yachts. This season they designed a new outdoor furniture collection for Talenti. Nalu — which means “wave” in Hawaiian, they explained — is not just a product line but a way of understand­ing the connection between covering and structure, between straight geometries and unpredicta­ble curves.

"It's a collection inspired by the design of the masters of the golden years of Italian design, born from the idea of a

unique cushion that folds over, generating the seat and the backrest, like a sort of wave, colorful cast aluminum armrests emerging from the soft structure that envelops them," said Ludovica Serafini and Roberto Palomba. Their Daybed Cruise completes the collection, responding to the increased demand for comfortabl­e and ultra private spaces.

Yaaz The Hayal circular swings by Turkish firm Yaaz set the scene for relaxation and escape in and out of the home. Led by the art direction of Italy's Angeletti Ruzza design studio, the structure is made from solid aluminum and the seat covered in fabric, while small tassels embellish its cords. "This poetic furniture that brings your mind back to childhood was born from the idea of creating a place-nonplace, a magical object like a flying carpet that helps you immerse yourself in a dreamy and liberating dimension," the company said.

Fast Outdoor design brand Fast presented its new collection­s born from the partnershi­p with the Argentinia­n architect and designer Alberto Lievore and with the designer and architect duo Francesco Meda and David Lopez Quincoces, who have been the brand's new creative directors since October 2023. Its new ranges — Velo, Roè, Naca and Samba — were designed by cutting-edge designers Meda and Lopez Quincoces who infused their design forward vision into essential outdoor furniture. Meda and Lopez Quincoces were also appointed creative directors of the upscale Acerbis furniture brand in 2020 and lava stone specialist Ranieri in 2023.

Kartell and Liberty Kartell's Plastics sofa and Trix pouffe by Piero Lissoni and Philippe Starck's Cara armchair were amped up with a new look thanks to the use of Liberty fabrics that are specially made for outdoor use. Implementi­ng these fabrics was aimed at incorporat­ing both style and functional­ity along with durability in outdoor applicatio­ns. Available in two geometric patterns and one floral design, the new collection of outdoor furniture infuses a sense of elegance into summer entertaini­ng via the heritage label's uplifting motifs.

 ?? ?? Ludovica Serafini and Roberto Palomba designed the Daybed Cruise Teak for Talenti.
Ludovica Serafini and Roberto Palomba designed the Daybed Cruise Teak for Talenti.
 ?? ?? The Trio collection for Minotti.
The Trio collection for Minotti.
 ?? ?? The Artemest Courtyard
The Artemest Courtyard
 ?? ?? Kartell and Liberty
Kartell and Liberty
 ?? ?? Yaaz outdoor
Yaaz outdoor
 ?? ?? Fast
Fast

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