Product Preview is a weekly series spotlighting the latest and greatest debuts in the marketplace. Check back every Friday for what’s new and notable.
It’s officially summer, and design brands across the globe are celebrating the season by unleashing a slew of fiery new styles. From hand-dyed fabrics to Le Corbusier–inspired seating, these head-turning looks are setting an exuberant tone for the warm-weather months.

Hem premiered the Palma series by British-Ghanaian designer Kusheda Mensah inside a pop-up showroom in Copenhagen for 3 Days of Design. The configurable collection features three playfully shaped poufs upholstered in a rainbow of sumptuous fabrics, ranging from camel-colored Elmosoft leather to Dedar’s nubby boucle Loop Loop and Kvadrat’s tactile Steelcut 3 by Frans Dijkmeijer and Giulio Ridolfo.

The Lawns dropped the second installation of its hand-illustrated Illuminata line. The launch transforms the fantastical Bestiary and grid-like Kings Cross fabric patterns into ultratextural wallcoverings—and introduces two new papers into the whimsical coloring book–fueled series: the shimmering Moonray and the gold leaf–inlaid Metallica.

Armadillo’s debut at 3 Days of Design featured a brand-new collab with Sydney-based industrial designer Tom Fereday. The collection, called Agra Forma, spans seven solid red oak furnishings—a desk, a bench, an armchair, a side chair, an ottoman and two stools—clad in the Australian rug brand’s plush pure wool Agra floorcovering in two distinct shades.

Stanton teamed up with Kravet for a sweeping 91-SKU rug collection. In addition to the speckled Allegra and the space-dyed Asscher, standouts from the collaboration—which features flatweave, hand-loomed, natural fiber, performance and wire wilton–woven styles—include the herringbone Cassio, the plaid Shetland and the zigzagging Durban.

Los Angeles brand Rad Furniture launched the Canasta collection by Guadalajara, Mexico–based designer Fabien Cappello. The four-piece seating family pays homage to the deconstructed designs of Le Corbusier and offers a lounge chair, an ottoman, and two sizes of sofas composed of square-shaped cushions that can be upholstered in an array of color and fabric combinations.

British designer Nicola Harding unveiled the Grand Union collection for Drummonds. Named after the canal that links London to Central England, the collab features three Arts and Crafts–inspired vanity basin cabinets—which can all be finished in any Farrow & Ball paint color or a hue from Harding’s curated Pure & Original palette—and a deco-driven side table punctuated by a cast-brass base and your choice of two deeply veined marble tops.

At Lightovation, Coco & Dash premiered The Lamp Shop, its collaboration with Savoy House. The line’s inaugural collection, Town & Country, boasts 30 spirited yet sophisticated cordless designs such as the highlighter-hued Melissa, the all-brass McKey and the fluted ceramic Cindy.

New York–based textile studio Rousseau released its inaugural fabric collection. The debut reimagines the brand’s dreamy hand-dyed designs into eight pure linen, small batch–printed repeats: the undulating Wave and the graphic Ripple, both available in sage green Jade, soft gray Silver, deep yellow Gold and blush pink Rose.

Bec Brittain’s “IN/Organic” exhibition is on full display at Colony. On view through July 11, the showcase features eight fresh iterations of the New York designer’s crystal-esque Seed light, including a floor lamp with a Calacatta Viola base, as well as the newly expanded Unfurl family, a philodendron-inspired line bedecked in bent arms and leaf-like glass diffusers.

At 3 Days, Warp & Weft rolled out a commemorative collection of hand-knotted rugs called Crossroads. Created in honor of the New York brand’s 25th anniversary, the line offers nine Nepalese artisan–crafted designs with highlights such as the tonal Current and Motus, a Himalayan wool and mulberry silk stunner adorned in a rhythmic geometric motif.


At the Dallas Market Center, Mitzi revealed more than 40 new designs. Along with the bronze tinted glass Zaley chandelier and the billowing cloud-like Keilah pendant, showstoppers include the blue-glazed Myla table lamp and Acacia, a brass-armed wall sconce with a wooden backplate and pleated linen shade.
Beni’s Chroma I line is a love letter to Ellsworth Kelly’s iconic color-blocked artworks. Currently on display at Galerie Sardine—an exhibition space inside an 18th century farmhouse in the historic Hamptons hamlet of Amagansett—the collection boasts 11 flatwoven striped rugs loosely modeled after the late, great artist’s “Spectrum Colors Arranged by Chance” series, including the cherry red and chocolate-striped Cerise and the burnt orange–accented Terry.