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Style Edit: Loro Piana explores the art of plaid at Milan Design Week 2026

STORYAidyn Fitzpatrick
Loro Piana’s Milan Design Week 2026 exhibition, “Studies, Chapter I: On the Plaid”, looks at the crucial role that plaid has played in the company’s story. Photo: Handout
Loro Piana’s Milan Design Week 2026 exhibition, “Studies, Chapter I: On the Plaid”, looks at the crucial role that plaid has played in the company’s story. Photo: Handout
Style Edit

An exhibition at the maison’s headquarters places 23 patterns under the spotlight in an exploration of fibre, craft and contemporary design

At Milan Design Week, it can sometimes feel as though every brand is vying to launch the biggest installation or exhibition in town. Loro Piana’s contribution this year is quieter, however – and more intriguing. On display until April 26 at Cortile della Seta, the label’s Milan headquarters, “Studies, Chapter I: On the Plaid” turns a deceptively simple object into a design investigation.
Loro Piana’s Milan Design Week 2026 exhibition explores the brand’s use of plaid patterns and techniques. Photo: Handout
Loro Piana’s Milan Design Week 2026 exhibition explores the brand’s use of plaid patterns and techniques. Photo: Handout

As Milan Design Week 2026 unfolds across the city, much of the action centres on the Brera district, with its showrooms, galleries and installations drawing a steady flow of designers, buyers and style enthusiasts. At the same time, the area’s courtyards and heritage buildings become intimate counterpoints to the buzz of the main fair, offering visitors a chance to slow down and experience design at a more human pace. Cortile della Seta, a historic palazzo that is one of the highlights of the Brera area, provides just that opportunity – especially because this year’s exhibition focuses on a single object.

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As its name implies, “Studies” approaches design through case studies, each dedicated to a specific object, function or use. The first instalment focuses on plaid, a pattern that has been central to Loro Piana since the mid‑1980s, when plaids, alongside scarves, were among the brand’s first finished products. From the outset, plaid served as a testing ground for materials and weaving techniques – a place where new blends, constructions and finishes could be explored before being scaled up into wider collections.

Visitors move through a sequence of 23 plaids, each treated as an individual study and differentiated by technique, construction, pattern and finish. Together they reveal how shifts in fibre, structure or surface transform both function and mood.

Inside the making of Loro Piana’s signature plaids. Photo: Handout
Inside the making of Loro Piana’s signature plaids. Photo: Handout

Finished pieces are shown alongside the raw materials they spring from, such as fibre and yarn – elements that sit at the core of Loro Piana’s identity. Processes are also made visible, so the plaid appears not just in its final form but as the outcome of a precise, repeatable practice. Selected materials – from vicuña and baby cashmere to cashmere, Loro Piana Royal Lightness and linen – are set in dialogue with more innovative fabrics such as Cashfur, Wish wool and Pecora Nera wool.

Techniques on show range from embroidery and appliqué to handloom weaving, needle punching, patchwork and screen printing, each filtered through Loro Piana’s vision. Historic symbols and graphic elements sourced from the archives reappear as contemporary motifs, while variations in colour, pattern, texture and construction demonstrate the depth of the brand’s savoir faire.

Loro Piana’s Milan Design Week 2026 exhibition, “Chapter I: On the Plaid”. Photo: Handout
Loro Piana’s Milan Design Week 2026 exhibition, “Chapter I: On the Plaid”. Photo: Handout

Seen in the context of a week that attracts hundreds of thousands of visitors to scores of events, Loro Piana’s measured, research-driven approach underlines how Milan Design Week has evolved into a platform not just for new product launches, but for investigations into process, material and use.

Each plaid is approached almost like couture, with a tailored, individual dimension. The result is an object that condenses materials, techniques and territories into a single piece – a neat encapsulation of a culture of excellence rooted in fibre, craft and nature, and a reminder that, in Milan’s busiest week of the year, sometimes the most impactful exhibitions are also the most focused.

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