Louis Vuitton Steps Into Home Design at Milan Design Week 2025
by Adriano Batista
At Milan Design Week this year, Louis Vuitton presented its Home Collection, an extension of its Objets Nomades line. The pieces were displayed in Palazzo Serbelloni, a neoclassical palace that matched the brand’s mix of tradition and modern design.
Since 2012, Objets Nomades has featured limited-edition furniture made in collaboration with designers like India Mahdavi, Patricia Urquiola, and Estúdio Campana. The new Home Collection expands this idea, offering a wider range of objects meant for daily living.
The Signature collection, designed by Patrick Jouin and Cristián Mohaded, reworks Louis Vuitton’s recognizable details—leather, wood, marquetry—into functional furniture. The pieces are made to be used, not just admired.
Inside the palazzo, the collection was arranged in different rooms, each with its own atmosphere. The Parini room focused on textiles, combining patterns by Charlotte Perriand, Cristián Mohaded, Zanellato/Bortotto, and Fortunato Depero alongside the Malle Vin trunk. Nearby, the modular game table and Kaleidoscope cabinet by Estúdio Campana mixed furniture and sculpture, playing with the idea of travel-inspired design.
Another room highlighted the work of Fortunato Depero, with bright colors turning fabrics and plates into wall decorations. The Beauharnais room was set up like a living space, with the Lagoon sofa by Patrick Jouin, Pecora armchairs by Patricia Urquiola, and the Vertigo coffee table. Smaller objects, like the Diago vases and Pétalo baskets, added softer, natural shapes to the room.
Check it out below:









LOEWE Reimagines the Teapot for Salone del Mobile 2025
PDF “Holy Motor” Campaign
Designer Andrea Pompilio maps a wardrobe for modern nomads, one that looks collected rather than curated.
Louis Vuitton has always been about journeys, both literal and imaginative.
VIKTORANISIMOV chose an unlikely stage for its first Berlin Fashion Week presentation: a former telecommunications bunker, now The Feuerle Collection museum.
After the show, designer Feng Chen Wang caught up with us, to open up about the emotion behind this collection, and the brand’s evolving identity – accompanied by backstage moments captured by Leiya Wang.
Take a look at DOUBLET’s Spring/Summer 2026 backstage, captured by the lens of Rita Castel-Branco during Paris Fashion Week, in exclusive for Fucking Young!
Take a look at KIDSUPER’s Spring/Summer 2026 backstage, captured by the lens of Tiago Pestana during Paris Fashion Week, in exclusive for Fucking Young!
For Camiel Fortgens’ SS26, models walked the actual streets of Paris during Fashion Week, portable speakers in hand, each playing a fragment of the show’s soundtrack.
Singer-songwriter HUMBE is Mexico’s breakout pop star, leading us into a new era of sentimental pop.
Created with artist Samuel de Sabóia, the lineup weaves together regeneration, spirituality, and a question: What does the future of fashion look like?
ZIGGY CHEN’s PRITRIKE doesn’t shout. It hums like the low, steady pulse of rain on summer earth.
For their SS26 show, the adidas and Yohji Yamamoto collaboration traded the standard runway for something more visceral: a four-act performance directed by choreographer Kiani Del Valle.
After showing off-calendar for two seasons in a presentation format, the 2023 LVMH Prize-nominated designer Kartik Kumra is now the first Indian designer to be on the official menswear calendar.
SANKUANZ’s Spring/Summer 2026 collection finds its heartbeat in Tara, the Tibetan Buddhist goddess who exists between two worlds, both enlightened and earthly.
Creative director Julian Klausner builds his first men’s collection for the house like a love letter to contradictions.
Fashion often pretends to have answers. TAAKK’s Spring/Summer 2026 collection prefers questions.
Doublet doesn’t ask you to change the world. It just shows what happens when fashion remembers where it comes from.
The idea is simple but clever: take the rigid codes of a gentleman’s wardrobe and soften them for the heat.
For SS26, Hung La’s LỰU ĐẠN closes its trilogy “MAYHEM,” “YOU DON’T BELONG HERE,” and now “NO MAN’S LAND”, with a collection that stares straight at the people society ignores.
Marine Serre‘s Spring/Summer 2026 collection is about the quiet revolution happening in every stitch. Titled THE SOURCE, this is clothing that moves with purpose, crafted by hands that treat savoir-faire not as a relic, but as rebellion.
Here,… »
When J Balvin puts his name on something, you know it won’t be ordinary.
C.R.E.O.L.E.’s DOM TOP FEVER collection is a reckoning. It digs into displacement, memory, and the act of reclaiming stories that have been buried or distorted.
Entitled ‘The Boy Who Jumped the Moon’, this latest KidSuper collection explored key notions of naïveté, innocence and dreams, which are some of the defining characteristics of any childhood.
Hermès’ Spring/Summer 2026 collection moves in straight lines: clean, precise, effortless.
Kolor’s Spring/Summer 2026 collection plays with time, not in a heavy, sci-fi way, but with a light touch.
Louis Gabriel Nouchi’s Spring/Summer 2026 collection asks a question: Do androids dream of wet desires?
Willy Chavarria’s Spring/Summer 2026 runway show was a protest, a love letter, and a reclamation of dignity.
Take a look at Kenzo’s Spring/Summer 2026 backstage, captured by the lens of Thomas Lizzi during Paris Fashion Week, in exclusive for Fucking Young!
Take a look at LAZOSCHMIDL’s Spring/Summer 2026 presentation, captured by the lens of Rita Castel-Branco during Paris Fashion Week, in exclusive for Fucking Young!
From strippers to cake and condoms as souvenirs, the Carne Bollente party during Paris Fashion Week was the place to dance the night away.
Staged at the legendary club Maxim’s in Paris, NIGO takes us out clubbing with his collection for Kenzo.