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Design

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

STORYSCMP Style Reporter
Hermès’ new collections for the home at Milan Design Week 2026. Photo: Handout
Hermès’ new collections for the home at Milan Design Week 2026. Photo: Handout
Style Edit

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.

Hermès Confettis baskets in Epsom calfskin. Photo: Handout
Hermès Confettis baskets in Epsom calfskin. Photo: Handout
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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.

A Hermès throw, made of hand-woven and hand-dyed cashmere. Photo: Handout
A Hermès throw, made of hand-woven and hand-dyed cashmere. Photo: Handout

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.

The Stadium d’Hermès table at Milan Design Week 2026. Photo: Handout
The Stadium d’Hermès table at Milan Design Week 2026. Photo: Handout

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.

Palladion D’Hermès Casaque vases. Photo: Handout
Palladion D’Hermès Casaque vases. Photo: Handout

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.

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