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Louis Vuitton Home Collections

As part of Milan Design Week, Louis Vuitton is unveiling its new Louis Vuitton Home Collections, revealed for the first time in the sumptuous setting of Palazzo Serbelloni. A neoclassical backdrop steeped in history, the Milanese palace is setting the stage for a new art de vivre during Design Week, where design, savoir-faire and innovation converse with heritage architecture and contemporary spirit. This event demonstrates Louis Vuitton’s growing presence in the design world through a display of its new Home Collections alongside original trunks and the now iconic Objets Nomades.

The Legacy of Objets Nomades

Since 2012, Objets Nomades have epitomised Louis Vuitton’s creative audacity in the field of design. These limited-edition pieces celebrate the coming together of renowned artisans and contemporary design talents such as India Mahdavi, Patricia Urquiola and Estúdio Campana. In 2025, Louis Vuitton continues to explore the world of design and home decor as it opens a new chapter with the launch of its Home Collections. A whole universe is dedicated to art de vivre for the very first time. Alongside Objets Nomades, the Louis Vuitton Home Collections are bringing together a new collection of furniture and lighting on an unprecedented scale, complete with decor lines, home textiles, tableware and unique games. To mark the launch of these exceptional collections, the House is shining a spotlight on two designers: futurist artist Fortunato Depero, whose graphic universe has inspired its textiles and tableware, and Charlotte Perriand, with her debut textile collection.

A Signature Style of Luxury and Craftsmanship

The Louis Vuitton Signature collection, representing the cornerstone of a new art de vivre, offers a fresh take on iconic House codes through pieces by Patrick Jouin and Cristián Mohaded. It features leather, precious wood, marquetry and other details borrowed from Louis Vuitton’s leather goods savoir-faire. Each creation combines beauty and function with a contemporary and warm aesthetic.

Living, Dining, and Playing in Style

Beyond these universes are home decor items by Patricia Urquiola, Jaime Hayón, Atelier Biagetti and even Studio Louis Vuitton; unique games (a pinball machine inspired by the world of Pharrell Williams and a surrealist game of table football by the Campana brothers), as well as an extensive line of textiles and rugs. Lastly, tableware is an ode to a wide range of shapes and inspirations, from Japanese designer Nendo’s jet black tones, to sparkling Limoges porcelain elevated by Monogram motifs, as well as vibrant, exotic pieces from the Jungle collection created alongside Laboratorio Paravicini.

Trunks as Storytellers of Heritage

True to its tradition of creating trunks since 1854, Louis Vuitton is celebrating more than 160 years of savoir-faire with the new Malle Vaisselier, featuring its new Tableware collections. Throughout the Palazzo Serbelloni, the emblematic trunks echo the new Maison collections, recalling the origins of the House.

A Sensory Journey Through Palazzo Serbelloni

An immersive display in the heart of Palazzo Serbelloni, Louis Vuitton is revealing this holistic vision of everyday life through a spectacular display that unfolds throughout the state rooms of Palazzo Serbelloni. As soon as visitors enter, they are invited on a sensory stroll through complementary, multifaceted worlds.

Rooms Filled with Character, Creativity, and Contrast

On the first floor, a voyage of discovery awaits. Pieces by Patrick Jouin and Cristián Mohaded are displayed alongside iconic Objets Nomades and new Home textiles. In the Petit Foyer, Estúdio Campana’s Odyssée table football commands attention like a playful design manifesto, while the Giangaleazzo room hosts Cristián Mohaded’s furniture as well as Patrick Jouin’s Regatta buffet. Cristián Mohaded’s spectacular Atlas onyx table is adorned with new pieces from the Jungle collection featuring exotic motifs filled with lush vegetation and wild animals. On the other side, you will find the Magnolia Vinyl with its Music Trunk that can hold up to 33 vinyl records.

In the Gabrio room, it’s time for dinner. Around the Atlas table, this time in a wood version by Cristián Mohaded, the new pieces of Arts de la Table are presented, including the Dolce Vita plates reminiscent of the sweetness of Sicilian life. The centerpiece of this new collection, the Malle Vaisselier opens like a contemporary cabinet of curiosities, revealing a service of refined porcelain and delicate glasses. Combining modernity and functionality, this exceptional trunk is not just a simple storage solution, but a masterpiece that transforms any gastronomic experience into a memorable event. Through it, the malletier heritage of the House is told in the language of reinvented everyday life. The colourful objects from Jaime Hayon’s Botanik collection are also presented alongside the Valse lamp by Atelier Biagetti. A few steps away, there is a pinball machine inspired by the world of the latest fashion show by Pharrell Williams, Men’s Creative Director.

A room bursting with colour pays homage to Fortunato Depero, as textiles and plates — displayed on plinths or hung on walls — become works of art in their own right. In the Beauharnais room, the Lagoon sofa by Patrick Jouin, the Pecora armchairs by Patricia Urquiola, the Inti vases and the Vertigo Coffee table all combine to create a vibrant living room, elevated by a refined games table. Patricia Urquiola’s Diago vases and Petalo baskets lend the interior an organic and poetic touch.

A Dialogue of Materials and Modernity

In the Parini room, textiles take their rightful place. Signature pieces by Charlotte Perriand, Cristián Mohaded, Zanellato/Bortotto and Fortunato Depero respond to each other in a dialogue of materials and colours. Alongside them, the Malle Vin extends this same requirement for savoir-vivre and sophistication and holds an assortment of glasses and carafes, as well as a total of 18 bottles. The adjacent boudoirs reveal spectacular pieces: the modular Games table and the fascinating Kaleidoscope cabinet by Estúdio Campana, a true dreamlike work of art. Adopting the codes of the traditional trunk, these hybrid creations blur the boundaries between luggage and furniture, reinventing the utilitarian object into a functional sculpture, halfway between nomadic heritage and exceptional design.

A Modernist Dream Reimagined

In the large foyer, four Cocoon Couture pendant lights by Estúdio Campana for the Objets Nomades collection gently swing, magnifying the craftsmanship of the art and workshops around the world, with whom the House collaborated for the occasion. Lastly, in the Palace courtyard, an exceptional work of art is reborn anew: La Maison au Bord de l’Eau, designed by Charlotte Perriand in 1934 and reconstructed by Louis Vuitton for the first time in 2013, has been installed once again, serving as a final ode to the modernist dream. Originally designed as a widely accessible seaside residence and imbued with radical elegance, this building powerfully embodies the values of knowledge-sharing, audacity and innovation which have remained constants throughout Louis Vuitton’s history.

Louisvuitton.com

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