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Milan Design Week
April 20-26

In celebration of Milan Design Week, we are proud to unveil our latest collections: "Falling Rivers" & "Mjuk."

Falling Rivers is made from recycled sari silk, while Mjuk emerges from the interplay of two techniques. These handcrafted collections meet at the intersection of textiles, space, and architecture.

The focus is not on ornamentation, but on the material itself as a design element. Both collections adhere to a radical reduction: the fiber defines structure, rhythm, and expression. The result is not decorative objects, but spatial elements that shape atmosphere and allow a new interpretation of spaces.

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Milan design week

Mo-So
April 20-26
Studio Khodai Mailand Design Week 2026

Falling Rivers

Fashioned from recycled sari silk, Falling Rivers reclaims and transforms a material with history, redefining luxury.

Each fiber bears traces of its former life. Color gradients, irregularities, and subtle breaks remain visible and are deliberately incorporated into the design. The result is a multi-layered material composition that doesn't create depth but rather possesses it within itself. The entire piece is handcrafted.

Inspired by the Fallingwater, the collection translates architectural principles into textile form. Flowing lines, layering, and a sense of movement define the composition. The surface appears both serene and in constant flux.

Falling Rivers
Falling Rivers

Luxury here is not defined by flawlessness. It arises through time and the conscious transformation of an existing material.

Mjuk

Purist lines and the three-dimensional interplay of woven and knotted surfaces characterize the design of the collection.

The deliberate combination of two techniques creates a nuanced cooperation of structure and surface. Density and openness exist in a controlled relationship to one another. Consequently lending the works a subtle complexity and a handcrafted precision.

The materiality remains clearly recognizable. Knots, transitions, and rhythms define the visual language.

Mjuk
Mjuk

The collection is not intended as a decoration. It acts as a textile architectural element, creating a clear and visible order.