Milan Design Week can quickly descend from showcase to stress test, where my attention is divided and endurance depleted in an effort to cover everything competing to be seen. The city, as always, expanded beyond itself: palazzos, courtyards, industrial shells, and storefronts all pressed into service, each promising immersion, innovation, or at the very least, a decent aperitivo. But beneath the noise, the spectacle, the oversaturation, and the endless scrolling made physical, I was reminded of the joy design can bring.
Resonant moments were found in the loudest voices as much as in the quiet ones that lingered. Some spaces slowed me down while others sped me up. Objects asked something of us and materials carried memory as they projected the future. Across categories and scales, designers seemed less interested in novelty for its own sake and more focused on evolution: of typologies, of rituals, of how we gather, cook, sit, play, and connect.
From fluid, organism-like seating to immersive installations that dissolved architecture into atmosphere, from countertop appliances that refused to be hidden to craft practices reimagined through digital lenses, the throughline was clear: design is not just about form or function—it’s about conditions for living, for interaction, and for reflection. Consider this a dispatch from within the chaos that came from sorting through press kits, emails, invitations, notes, and the personal recommendations that got me through MDW 2026… and enjoy.
1. Roca’s Meridian Collection

Photo: Courtesy of Roca
In the churn of Salone, Roca carved out a rare moment of calm. Its booth, designed by Mesura, drew on Catalan architectural language — an all-white stair-line motif and roofline silhouettes — to channel a distinctly Mediterranean sensibility. Within this quiet envelope, visitors moved through collections like Avant, Ohtake, and the ever-colorful Nu, but the clear focal point was Meridian: a poised reworking of one of the brand’s best-known lines.

Photo: Courtesy of Roca
Led by Altherr Désile Park, the redesign walked a careful line between evolution and continuity. The brief was straightforward but nuanced: update the collection of sinks, toilets, and bidets for contemporary living—read: integrated storage, softened geometries, a sense of lightness—while preserving its lineage. “On one hand, we had a possibility to really go in deep with redoing the design,” noted partner Jeanette Altherr. “On the other hand, we needed to keep some sort of connection to the existing collection.”

Photo: Courtesy of Roca
The result held onto the Meridian name while reframing it through a Mediterranean lens — its defining arc motif tracing both the movement of the sun and the invisible longitudinal line it references. That gesture carried through the collection with quiet confidence, lending a simple, architectural elegance. In white, matte white, and matte black, Meridian transformed the bathroom into something warmer, more intimate — a private interior suffused with light.
2. Axia by Vittorio Venezia and Carolina Martinelli for LODES

What happens when you strip a chandelier down to its essence—no visible wiring, no excess, just balance? Axia’s Salone showcase answered that question with a striking response. Born from a process of experimentation, the suspension light resolved into a continuous, almost seamless system where structure, energy, and material quietly aligned as much as they conspired to delight.
While undeniably sophisticated, the designers’ work rethought how lighting could affect spatial perception without calling attention to itself. With its poised geometry and subtle presence, Axia hung like a small constellation of order and freedom, held in perfect equilibrium.
3. Common Ground by Gabriella Khalil for Ege Carpets
What did “common ground” look like in material form? Gabriella Khalil offered an answer with Ege Carpets — one built through line, tone, and rhythm. Ribbon, Imprint, Swell, and Maze read as quiet studies in movement. Creams and chocolates deepened with black accents, while linear gestures guided the eye across space. Beneath that calm, performance emerged: modularity, acoustic backing, and custom formats positioned the rugs as tools as much as surfaces. The result landed somewhere between softness and structure—shared, but never generic.
4. The Reissued Free System Sofa by Claudio Salocchi for Acerbis
Conversation pits returned, but not as nostalgia—as a shift in how we gather. Free System met that moment with ease. Originally conceived in the 1970s, Salocchi’s modular landscape felt newly fluent. Low, quilted volumes connected into soft topographies that invited sprawl, conversation, and reconfiguration—something I didn’t realize I needed until midway through Salone. There was rigor beneath the softness, but what lingered was openness: seating that encouraged posture to unfold rather than conform.
5. Loop Sofa by Elena Salmistraro for Ethimo
What if a sofa behaved like an organism? Loop suggested it could.
Salmistraro’s design rejected front and back in favor of a continuous, self-supporting form that curved and looped into itself. It felt futuristic in construction, yet deeply organic in how its volumes gathered and held space. Color grounded it, but the form did the work—guiding movement, prompting pause, encouraging interaction. Loop resisted labels entirely, operating instead as a soft, spatial system.
6.
Why should seating behave? With Twins, Júlia Esqué treated the armchair less like a fixed object and more like a character capable of changing its outfit, its attitude, even its mood. Built on a cinema-seat-inspired structure, the two iterations played against each other. Formal Twin remained restrained—crisp geometry, sharp piping, a composed, almost architectural presence. Drama Twin, in contrast, became unruly. Fabric draped, folded, and exaggerated. It swished, performed, and refused to sit quietly.
That tension drew attention throughout Salone. By shifting nothing but the “wardrobe,” Esqué subverted the typology itself. The Designer’s Editions pushed further: contrast piping heightened Formal’s clarity, while structured skirts gave Drama a sharper edge. Irreverent and self-aware, Twins proved that furniture could hold form and fantasy at once—and even enjoy the costume change.
7. Kriskadecor Celebrates Its Centennial
Kriskadecor didn’t present a booth—the century-old brand built an environment. Odosdesign transformed aluminum chains into a fluid architecture that shifted with movement and light. Freed from hard edges, cascades of multi-chromatic chains veiled, revealed, and reframed space. Color gradients rippled, dissolving boundaries and pulling visitors inward, while pockets of seating and selfie-ready vignettes emergedlike pauses in motion.
You didn’t walk through it—you slowed within it. A century of material exploration condensed into something immersive, connective, and quietly celebratory.
8. Borgonuovo Game Table by Armani/Casa
Games have always been about more than competition—they carry ritual, posture, and presence. The Borgonuovo Game Table by Armani/Casa leaned into that truth, turning play into a composed, almost cinematic act.
Ebony wood, taupe leather, and satin brass edges formed a restrained Art Deco silhouette. The central gesture— rotating top that revealed a checkered surface—allowed the table to shift roles in real time. Drawers concealed game pieces, cup holders slid out discreetly, and monogrammed details echoed balance and precision. It became a quietly indulgent arena where strategy met atmosphere, and every move felt intentional.
9. SMEG’s Freshest Countertop Appliances
Why shouldn’t everyday tools carry the same design intelligence as furniture? SMEG has long elevated the countertop into a curated surface, and at EuroCucina 2026, that philosophy came into sharper focus. Amid larger appliances, it was the smaller pieces that caught my attention. Multiuse grills, combination microwaves, and the brand’s first air fryer reframed cooking as both ritual and rhythm.
The SMEG Multiuse Grill read like a design object first boasting the brand’s iconic visual language––soft, retro-inflected, and quietly sculptural. It displayed adaptability through interchangeable plates and multiple cooking modes.
Nearby, the new microwave range pushed beyond reheating into something more expansive with multi-step cooking, air frying capabilities, and automatic programs. The compact system compressed the logic of a full kitchen into a single, considered form.
And then there was the air fryer, perhaps the most unlikely icon. Typically relegated to the realm of the purely functional, there it was reimagined as something worth being displayed: simple, compact, and even playful in color. With SMEG’s latest releases, everyday countertop products became a design gesture where technology, aesthetics, and habit aligned into something both practical and expressive.
10. Bathco Wooden Lavatories and Novel Pedestals
Bathco presented bathroom fixtures as subversive material experiences with the power to pull focus in any space. The Wood collection centered the grain itself, with each sink carved from treated timber that resists humidity while retaining its natural texture, tone, and even scent. No two were identical, and the varied designs amplified those organic nuances, turning each washbasin into a quiet study of growth rings and imperfection.
In contrast, the pedestal sinks asserted something more architectural. Cast in porcelain, they grounded the assortment with a sculptural presence that felt solid, balanced, and monumental. Together, they hinted at a duality for the bathroom: one rooted in nature, the other in structure. The choice became less about style and more about sensation. Did you want to feel the grain beneath your hands, or rest in the quiet certainty of form?
11. Lina Ghotmeh’s Metamorphosis for MoscaPartners Variations 2026
At Palazzo Litta, space stopped behaving predictably. Ghotmeh’s Metamorphosis in Motion reworked the courtyard into a labyrinth that bent perception and guided movement. Geometry shifted, pathways unfolded, and architecture dissolved into atmosphere. It extended beyond the visual—seating, scent, and sound completed the experience. Less installation, more encounter.
12. Guatemala Diseña Con Las Manos
Amid a week obsessed with the new, this project returned to the tried and true. When I encountered Guatemala Diseña Con Las Manos, it felt less like an installation and more like a conversation. A stepped structure—echoing Tikal—anchored the space, while layers of textile and beadwork activated its surface. Up close, material shifted into something almost digital, yet unmistakably human. Movement, light, and craft accumulated into an immersive experience. It offered a quiet counterpoint: innovation not as replacement, but as continuation.


















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