top of page
29 kopyası.jpg

January 27, 2026 | DESIGN & INTERIORS

the BEST of Maison&Objet

words Maria Chiara Antonini

Hundreds of exhibitors and thousands of visitors animated the Paris trade fair dedicated to design and the world of interiors. A vibrant crossroads of ideas, materials, and visions, where furniture, decorative objects, textiles, and ceramics engaged in a continuous dialogue, transforming the fair into a living narrative of contemporary design.

A SHARED LANGUAGE 

With over 67,000 visitors and 2,294 exhibitors, the latest Paris edition of Maison&Objet once again confirmed its role as a privileged observatory on the future of interior design. An unmissable event that continues to capture and interpret the transformations of contemporary living. The common thread running through the showcased novelties is clear: a renewed focus on traditional crafts—from ceramics and textiles to glassmaking—reinterpreted through contemporary design languages that seamlessly blend memory, materiality, creative vision, and modern aesthetics.

 

The collections on display thus become tools for reflection, offering sensitive responses to the evolving needs of everyday life, with the aim of enhancing quality of life through design. But what will the interiors of the future look like? Offering a possible answer is Elizabeth Leriche, scenographer and trend forecaster, and curator of the exhibition What’s New? In Decor. 

 

“The interiors of tomorrow will be increasingly modular, designed to adapt to constantly evolving lifestyles. The pursuit of wellbeing, comfort, and a reassuring sense of familiarity will remain central,” she explains. Her installation, which interprets living as a layering of time, fits seamlessly into the theme of the 2026 edition, Past Reveals Future, presenting a broad and multifaceted vision of décor as fertile ground for design experimentation.

 

CRAFT, REVISITED

 

Ceramics take center stage, marking a heartfelt return to an artisanal aesthetic: vibrant surfaces, bold patterns, intense colors, and a material richness that becomes decoration in itself. A prime example is the new collection by Paola Paronetto, created in collaboration with Giovanni Botticelli, designed to meet the demands of increasingly sophisticated interior projects. This vision is echoed in the new dinnerware line designed by Belgian-Peruvian artist Shirley Villavicencio Pizango, known as Shurleey, for Serax, where flowers, plants, and fruit are transformed into poetic illustrations that enliven the table. Strong character and formal rigor define the identity of Table Machine, which makes color and geometry its contemporary hallmark. More classic in tone, with earthy hues and tactile surfaces, are the collections by Mos Portugal and Onofrio Acone, the latter also selected by Elizabeth Leriche for her installation.

 

The floral world weaves through many of the collections, taking on ever-new forms: from Doing Goods cutlery adorned with delicate raised floral motifs, to the textile realm, where brands such as Goyaal Living and Jamini celebrate a slow, welcoming way of living—one defined by calm, intimacy, and an elegance that evokes the timeless charm of the countryside.

LIGHTING AS NARRATIVE

Lighting design also embraces bold colors and playful forms. The new collections by Ferroluce, Fermob, and Valerie Objects combine imaginative expression and experimentation with cutting-edge technology, transforming light into a narrative and scenographic element. 

 

Furniture design, too, takes center stage, with soft, enveloping lines like those proposed by Pedrali and Morpho, inviting a more mindful way of experiencing living spaces—one that fosters connection with oneself, with others, and with beauty. The new chair by House of Capricorn stands as a declaration of love for craftsmanship, a dialogue between mastery and traditional know-how that also resonates in the world of surfaces: from the ceramic tiles of Portuguese brand Theia to those of Turkish label Karoistanbul, characterized by modular, combinable forms designed to create unique, highly personalized solutions.

 

TOWARDS TOMORROW

 

And what about the hospitality of the future? Rudy Guénaire, through his installation Suite 2046, envisions it as an experience suspended between storytelling and visual poetry: “an architecture that strips back to the essentials and dares to dream big.” A journey that reinterprets everyday rituals, transforming them into a sensitive narrative poised between beauty, imagination, and desire.

bottom of page