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Issue 62 - Living in the Environment Issue

Issue 62

Living in the Environment Issue

Issue 62 is the first issue of the year and always a great time to put our best foot forward. With Adam Goodrum, the loveliest man in design, as Guest Editor, we draw on his insights as a furniture designer, artist and educator to look at the makers shaping our design world. Sustainability has never been more important, and increasingly this is a consideration from the start with projects designed to address their immediate environment as well as the longevity of the planet. From the coldest winters to the most tropical of summers, addressing how we live in the environment is crucial to creating the perfect home.

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Products already catching eyes at Milan Design Week 2025
ProductsHabitusliving Editor

Products already catching eyes at Milan Design Week 2025

These early product standouts — from sculptural forms to reflective surfaces — capture just a sliver of what Milan Design Week 2025 has begun to unveil.


As Milan Design Week 2025 unfolds, a wave of new releases is beginning to take shape across the city and Salone del Mobile. While the full scale of launches is still to be revealed, these early product highlights offer a glimpse into the evolving vernacular of contemporary design.

Nagi by Yabu Pushelberg for Salvatori

Salvatori reveals Nagi, a new natural stone texture by long-time collaborators Yabu Pushelberg. Shown ahead of the official opening of Milan Design Week, the tile explores the quiet rhythms of water through a series of concentric ripples carved into marble and limestone. The texture – aptly named after the Japanese word for the stillness of the sea – is available in Salvatori’s signature stones, which include Bianco Carrara, Verde Guatemala and Pietra d’Avola. Designed as a rectangular tile, it features a wave motif that compresses and expands across the surface, allowing for vertical or horizontal installation and varied visual rhythms. Nagi is the inaugural surface texture by Yabu Pushelberg for Salvatori, extending a creative partnership that includes the Anima and Punto bathroom collections and the lauded brand’s New York flagship.

Nagi by Yabu Pushelberg, Salvatori.

Sedona by Patricia Urquiola

Patricia Urquiola presents Sedona, a bed conceived as a personal retreat within the domestic space. Referencing the red earth of the Arizona town after which it is named, Sedona is defined by soft geometry and an enveloping presence, positioning the bed as a “room within a room.” The design by revered Urquiola responds to the ritual of sleep and rest, encouraging distance from digital interference and reconnection with everyday acts of care — reading, conversation and pause. Its fabric, chosen by the designer, features a lilac base punctuated by orange and green, abstractly recalling the tones of the American landscape.

Sedona, Patricia Urquiola, photo by Studio Eye.

Paola Lenti explores connection through ‘Ritrovarsi’

The annual Paola Lenti project for Milano Design Week 2025 is titled Ritrovarsi — a concept centred on reconnection through space, material and shared experience. The flagship store becomes a setting for rediscovering the meaning of design, with indoor and outdoor collections unfolding along a chromatic path that explores the relationship between architecture and nature. A series of historical re-editions are on display at Paola Lenti Milano and in the gardens of Àlfa. These include the Azul lounge chair by Lina Bo Bardi, the Half Moon cocktail table by Greta Magnusson Grossman, and the Légère sofa by Angelo Mangiarotti and Chiara Pampo. Presented as part of an ongoing focus on design history and reinterpretation, the re-editions bring past works into the present while retaining their original formal and material intent.

Dock, Paola-Lenti, photo by Fabrizio Polla Mattiot.
Amable, Paola Lenti, photo by Sergio Chimenti.
Bistrò, Paola Lenti, photo by Sergio Chimenti.

Glas Italia unveils designs by Philippe Starck and Tokujin Yoshioka

Glas Italia presents three new pieces that continue its exploration of glass as a structure and surface. Philippe Starck introduces the Crystal Table, a dining table that draws on the familiar lines of the previously released Crystal Stool. Both pieces highlight the purity of glass, balancing minimal form with precision craftsmanship. Starck, also, debuts Transformer, a series of vases created through a thermal deformation process. The result is a collection of one-off sculptural objects, each with a subtly altered and unique form. Additionally, Tokujin Yoshioka returns with i mirror, a floor mirror refined with fine grindings and defined by its restrained and discrete elegance. The design plays with reflection and light, furthering Glas Italia’s commitment to poetic experimentation with material and technique.

Magis presents new collections at Salone del Mobile 2025

Updates to existing collections at Magis include new finishes for TwainTacitoAll-RoundIn-SideSubstance and Piña. Together, these additions underline the revered brand’s commitment to enduring collaborations and experimentation across its product range. Notable additions include:

is the Motta chair by Jasper Morrison, built from a steel tubing frame with a new mounting system that allows the seat and backrest to be attached in various finishes. Morrison, whose collaboration with Magis began in 1993, returns with a design that prioritises clarity and adaptability.

Ronan Bouroullec expands his ongoing partnership with the Ancora collection — a range of tables and side tables that juxtapose the weight of concrete with refined geometries and sculptural presence.

BrogliatoTraverso presents Pied-à-terre, an extendable round table defined by a graphic central support that doubles as a ballast, pushing the typology of the round table into new territory.

Konstantin Grcic debuts Bishop, a chair made entirely of painted steel sheet with a high-gloss finish, while Paul Cocksedge introduces Squash, a set of mirrors that shift between two and three dimensions. Cocksedge also curates a related installation at the Magis showroom on Corso Garibaldi.

Motta chair by Jasper Morrison, Magis.
Motta low table by Jasper Morrison, Magis.

Next up: The products we’re excited to see at Salone del Mobile 2025


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Habitusliving Editor

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furnitureGlas Italiamagismilan design weekMilan Design Week 2025patricia urquiolaphilippe starckproductproduct designsalone del mobile


Related Articles
Issue 62 - Living in the Environment Issue

Issue 62

Living in the Environment Issue

Issue 62 is the first issue of the year and always a great time to put our best foot forward. With Adam Goodrum, the loveliest man in design, as Guest Editor, we draw on his insights as a furniture designer, artist and educator to look at the makers shaping our design world. Sustainability has never been more important, and increasingly this is a consideration from the start with projects designed to address their immediate environment as well as the longevity of the planet. From the coldest winters to the most tropical of summers, addressing how we live in the environment is crucial to creating the perfect home.

Order Issue