10/19/2025
A secret white escape by the ocean.
A tiny cabane overflowing with flowers — a place to flee the rush of life and restore inner balance.
A dreamlike retreat, brought to life through AI by Tiny House Perfect @ tinyhouseperfect.
-
© Tiny House Perfect
-
10/17/2025
The new Miriade armchair transforms yarn remnants into a vibrant constellation of colours and forms.
Each structural pad is patiently crafted by hand and then joined to the others — a work of skill and care that makes every piece unique.
Embracing and comfortable, Miriade celebrates the encounter between Estúdio Campana and Paola Lenti — where creativity, craft, and the principle of reuse converge in a new expression of beauty.
Miriade armchair, design Estúdio Campana .
-
© Paola Lenti srl, ph. Sergio Chimenti (slides 1, 4)
-
10/15/2025
With Morpho, a contemporary tapestry, remnants otherwise destined for disposal are transformed into beauty, aesthetic dignity, new function and life.
Handcrafted in our workshops, it reflects the sustainable vision of both the designers and Paola Lenti, where materials are reborn through the mastery of Italian artisans.
Morpho tapestry, design Estúdio Campana .
-
© Paola Lenti srl, ph. Sergio Chimenti (slides 3, 4, 5)
ph. © Maurizio Natta (slide 2)
-
10/13/2025
The red of corals and the blue of the sea come together in Alegre, the new outdoor pouf by Paola Lenti.
Layers of machine stitching and hand-guided embroidery are crafted with yarns recovered from the production of our exclusive fabrics. Each piece is shaped by the gestures of the artisan, making every pouf unique and non-replicable — a testament to responsible resource use and to the finest Italian craftsmanship.
Alegre poufs.
-
© Paola Lenti srl, ph. Sergio Chimenti
-
10/11/2025
A terrace overlooking Itaim Bibi, one of the coolest São Paulo districts, Brazil.
Teatime sofa, Smile armchairs, design Francesco Rota.
Nido poufs, design Patricia Urquiola , Eliana Gerotto.
Strap side table, design Victor Carrasco.
Project by DB Arquitetos .
-
ph. © Tuca Reinés
-
10/09/2025
Things we like.
Julie Wolfe , Dress Code x 10. 2024, Archival pigment ink and pastel on Arches rag paper.
Julie Wolfe, multimedia artist based in Washington, D.C. and New York, transforms images of beauty—fashion, art, botanicals—through cutting, recombining, and layering unexpected colors.
Her visual language, grounded in transformation and juxtaposition, becomes a lens for interpreting the evolving relationships between bodies, garments, and cultural memory. By embracing the grotesque—surprising, wondrous, at times estranging—Wolfe unsettles the familiar and opens new, unbounded ways of seeing.
She is currently collaborating with The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute for its Spring 2026 exhibition, and her art is held in important public and private collections worldwide.
This artwork is included in her recent book, Apophenia 02: Exquisite Co**se.
-
art work © Julie Wolfe
-
10/07/2025
Through the glass, the garden becomes a painting of light and colour.
Comfortable and inviting, the Canvas sofa blends seamlessly with the greenery. Its cushions are upholstered in the signature Roseto fabric, soft yet resistant. The light structure is covered in Maris, Paola Lenti’s open-weave textile — entirely recyclable, waterproof, and designed to endure even the most challenging environments.
Canvas sofa, design Francesco Rota.
-
© Paola Lenti srl, ph. Sergio Chimenti
-
09/29/2025
Stairway to heaven.
In Brno, Czech Republic, the Era Café’s iconic spiral staircase rises like a white ribbon unfurling through a field of primary colours.
Originally built in 1927 by architect Josef Kranz — influenced by the Dutch De Stijl movement — the building is a restored functionalist manifesto in red, blue, white, and black.
Once again, it welcomes guests in the grand Central European café tradition.
Here, colour is not just surface — it’s structure, atmosphere, identity.
-
ph. © Sam Brewski
-
09/27/2025
On the rooftop pool decks of Thompson Houston, Paola Lenti’s outdoor collection creates an atmosphere of refinement and ease, in a project curated by BeDesign Houston .
-
ph. Adrian Dueñas (slide 1) and BeDesign Houston
-
09/25/2025
Isole side tables with Sciara top: where lava becomes canvas, glass becomes pigment.
Through patience and mastery, raw matter is transformed into patterns that recall marble-like veining or delicate geometries.
Each surface reveals a natural craquelé effect, each hue shines with luminous intensity — the result of an exquisite handcraft, where time, knowledge, and imagination converge.
Isole side table, design Marella Ferrera .
-
© Paola Lenti Srl, ph. Fabrizio Polla Mattiot
-
09/23/2025
Kim Sun-Hyoung bluegardenblue, from the series GardenBlue, painting on co.tton, 2025
South Korean artist Kim Sun-Hyoung reimagines the ancient rhythm of Korean porcelain through the immediacy of brush and pigment. His GardenBlue works capture the spirit of Oriental ink painting—marks left uncorrected, gestures gathered into living textures, time absorbed into paper.
“I think flowers are not just flowers, but also beautiful memories and meanings inherent within them. That’s why I sometimes refer to these ideas as flowers that are not flowers.”
With single brushstrokes, Kim cultivates a garden of memory and meaning—where the fluidity of tradition meets the clarity of the present.
-
art work © Kim Sun-Hyoung bluegardenblue
-