Style Edit: Hermès’ 2026 home collections, unveiled at Milan Design Week

From a marble table by Barber Osgerby to cashmere throws in the bojagi tradition, the maison’s latest offerings are a study in craft
As Milan Design Week drew to a close last weekend, Hermès’ 2026 home collections stood out as one of the event’s most compelling presentations – a disciplined, dazzling case for the art of the domestic object.
The furniture fair has long served as a proving ground for the world’s great luxury maisons, and Hermès – reliably unconcerned with trends – arrived with a new suite of home collections as deliberate in their making as they were confident in their materials.

Presented from April 22 to 26, the Collections for the Home 2026 were guided by a simple conviction: that how an object comes into being is part of what it becomes. What emerged felt less like a product launch than a study in restraint.

If one piece defined the collection, it was the Stadium d’Hermès table, conceived by British design duo Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby. Its figure-of-eight form, executed in marble marquetry of Venato Carrara and Verde Alpi, simultaneously evokes a racetrack and the curve of a horse’s back. The legs, slender and two-toned, recall showjumping poles. It’s the kind of object that rewards contemplation.

Equally assured is the Palladion line – vessels and a disc-shaped centrepiece in hand-hammered palladium-finish metal, named for the protective statue of the Greek goddess Pallas Athena. Combining the metal with horsehair, lizard-edged calfskin and cassia wood handles, the pieces go beyond function and decoration to become talismans, their hammered surfaces shimmering with reflected light.

No less precise, the Piano boxes in leather marquetry – their lids composed like miniature scores across four colour variants, from rouge radieux to pain d’épice – and the perforated Confettis baskets in Epsom calfskin demonstrate the maison’s sure hand with colour and material. Nothing is gratuitous.