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 was a whirlwind week in the City of Light. Tens of thousands of industry aficionados, including yours truly, congregated in France for the winter edition of Maison&Objet and Paris Design Week, where we discovered an array of forward-thinking designs that will be shaping interior trends for seasons to come. From painter-inspired wallcoverings to washable cotton-linen satin drapery, here are some of the most memorable looks from the fair and beyond.
At Maison&Objet, Corey Damen Jenkins’s lighting designs for Eichholtz quickly drew a crowd. Showstoppers from the historically informed series, which references everything from 1920s flapper dresses to the Chrysler Building, include the shell-clad Isabelle wall lamp, the feathery Erika chandelier, the sphere-topped Izzy floor lamp and the lacquered Bentley table lamp.
Romo’s newly launched Celino series offers the rarest of luxuries: easy-to-clean window treatments. Composed of buttery soft—and washable—cotton-linen satin, the wide-width fabric comes in more than five dozen hues, ranging from golden yellow Nectar to sky blue Tourmaline and aubergine Radicchio.
Arte’s Les Tapisseries collection transported us straight to a medieval castle. An homage to centuries-old tapestries, the highly touchable 10-piece debut includes the textured Bucolique, the jacquard Ramage, the embroidered Ornement and the painterly panoramic Escapade.
Kendall Wilkinson’s debut collection for Iatesta Studio stole our hearts at the Atelier+Spa wellness pop-up inside Calma Paris. The preview featured four artisan-crafted lighting designs from the 22-piece series (which will launch later this spring), among them the perfectly pleated Ainsley chandelier and Isabella, a fretwork-covered metal lantern also offered as a chandelier and pendant.
Andrea Monath Schumacher’s collaboration with The Vale London is a love letter to the designer’s late grandmother, Elizabeth “Liesl” Burger Monath, a surrealist artist who studied under Salvador Dalí. The collection offers four sublime wallcoverings inspired by her paintings and outfitted in soft tones and graphic motifs: the undulating Lava Lamp, the trippy Cubist, the 3D-lacquered Guli and the kaleidoscopic Liesl Lattice.
Pollack’s latest designs for its Spring Street line made us want to break out in song. The soon-to-launch collection features three exuberant patterns—the embroidered, grid-like Tic Tac Toe; the flame-stitched ikat Kasuri; and the painterly Equilibrium—in multiple earth-toned colorways, such as terra cotta and pale blue.
Liberty’s latest launch commemorates its illustrious 150-year history. Called The House of Liberty, the collection reimagines some of the British brand’s most celebrated patterns as 17 fresh wallpapers, including the cloud-framed Prospect Mural—which draws from designer Bernard Nevill’s 1968 Prospect Road scarf design—and Aurora Ink, an iridescent ombre beauty that evokes a shimmery plain-woven silk.
Tréca Paris wowed guests at Maison&Objet with a glimpse inside its handmade beds and mattresses. The booth’s gallery-like display highlighted the couture-level artisanal techniques and earth-friendly materials—including plant-based foam—used to craft the brand’s luxurious designs, two of which were presented alongside a high-end dog bed.
Weitzner’s upcoming Mementos collection will transport your clients to exotic destinations across the globe. Drawing from decades of international travel, the line translates an array of iconic architectural motifs into fabrics, window treatments and wallcoverings, including the stained glass–like Lunette and the animal print–esque Expedition.
The Samuel & Sons collaboration with Martin Brudnizki and Nicholas Jeanes of And Objects pays tribute to the Pre-Raphaelites. Inspired by the paintings of Dante Gabriel Rossetti, John Everett Millais and John William Waterhouse, the Romaunt collection spans 10 hand-finished passementerie trims in eight jewel-tone colorways, including a burgundy-and-cerulean beaded fringe and a scallop-edged embroidered border in shades of deep blue and emerald.
Ralph Lauren’s Spring 2026 Meadow Lane presentation was a sight to behold. On display at the brand’s flagship store in Saint-Germain, the delightful installation stretched from the salon to the Ralph’s Coffee shop, and featured standouts such as Elyria Floral, a vintage-style batik with a scalloped border, and the heirloom-inspired Elliston Embroidery.
Lala Curio’s couture-quality collab with six designers from the AAPI Design Alliance was every bit as dreamy as we expected. On display at the Common Thread pop-up—alongside pieces from Jiun Ho’s crushworthy Nomad collection and new designs from Shiir Rugs—the line’s attention-grabbing wallcoverings include the micro-beaded, cloudy sky–inspired Shanshui of Formosa by Eric Chang, and Jean Liu’s Isles of Reverie, which features an ethereal landscape bedecked in hand-embellished blossoms and bonsai trees.
At Maison&Objet, Italian leather brand Giobagnara introduced two multifunctional designs into its ongoing collaboration with Belgian architect Glenn Sestig. Among the newcomers are Lloyd, a slender storage cabinet with a slanted top that allows it to double as an ergonomic standing desk, and Meraya, a wall-mounted marvel with leather-inlaid doors that open to a three-panel mirrored surface.
Pierre Frey’s Mémoires Colorées collaboration with Isabelle de Borchgrave offered a jolt of inspiration. Presented in a sweeping showroom installation that re-created the late Belgian artist’s studio, daydream inducers from the polychromatic collection include the squiggly Sinularia fabric; the splattered Palette wallpaper; and Bebelle, a bold botanical rug adorned in bright red blossoms.
William Peace’s Western Skies collection for Holland & Sherry is an ode to the American West. Brimming with earthy and rustic materials, head-turners from the collab include the subtly striated Prairie Chenille; the embroidered sheer Wildflower; the hand-painted Bison Horn paper; the multitonal melange linen Lasso cord; and Old Faithful, a Persian-knotted rug with an ultraplush mohair pile.
Dedar’s 2026 collection is a pattern lover’s dream. In addition to the modernist, subway map–inspired Métro Beaubourg and the geometric Annodo Arcobaleni, eye-catchers from the sweeping 59-SKU debut include the mountainscape-lined There, and Darwinista, a jacquard velvet filled with figural toucans and monkeys.
Shoppe Object made a splashy Parisian debut at the Who’s Next show. The color-drenched curation included a live demonstration by artist James Gallagher, and featured noteworthy exhibitors such as Flos, Fredericks & Mae, Il Buco Vita, Mud Australia, Salima Zahi, Serax, and Tina Frey Designs.
Maison&Objet’s “Curatio” exhibition took center stage in Hall 7. The Thomas Haarmann–curated installation showcased nearly two dozen avant-garde designs by a medley of international makers, including a steel circular sofa with accordion-like folds by Polish metalwork studio Zieta and burnished wood stools by Kuro Monorisu from collectible Belgian brand Atelier Contour.












