Inside the iconic La Pelota venue in Milan’s Brera design district, the French luxury house Hermès unveiled its new home collection during Milan Design Week 2025. Designed by Charlotte Macaux Perelman, architect and artistic director of Hermès Home Collections, in collaboration with Alexis Fabry, the presentation was imagined as a “quest for the object.”

The space featured original creations enclosed in suspended, nearly colorless white boxes that cast vibrant halos onto the floor—creating an otherworldly, immersive experience.

“It is through the immateriality of their aura that objects first appear, like emotions,” Hermès said of the collection.

Here’s everything the French maison revealed during Milan Design Week 2025:

Pivot d’Hermès

A sculptural side table by Tomás Alonso, featuring a lacquered glass base and a Japanese cedar top that rotates on an eccentric axis. Functional, dynamic, and visually hypnotic.

Hermès en Contrepoint Dinner Service

This 33-piece porcelain set is hand-painted in watercolor by artist Nigel Peake. Inspired by the rhythmic patterns of musical meter and repeated fractions, the dinnerware invites endless visual combinations and table settings.

“When you enter the space, it feels almost like you’re daydreaming. There is a levitation effect that makes everything feel lighter, more ethereal. We want the objects to have a presence without being heavy,” said Florence Lafarge, Creative Director at Hermès, in an interview with Architectural Digest.

The H Partition

Hermès is celebrated for its legendary throws, and The H Partition continues the tradition. Hand-woven from ivory-hued cashmere in a chevron pattern, it is subtly enhanced with 24-carat gold powder to give it an elegant, luminous finish.

Vase Doublé d’Hermès

Crafted from layered, mouth-blown glass in moody gradients and detailed with leather harness accents. A seamless blend of equestrian heritage and contemporary object design.

Paddock Baskets

A tactile tribute to Hermès’ equestrian roots. These leather baskets feature tartan-inspired stitching, transforming everyday utility into collectible design.