Louis Vuitton Bed Trunk
Louis Vuitton Bed TrunkPhoto Courtesy of Louis Vuitton

Louis Vuitton Expands Its Art of Living: Introducing the Home Collections 2025

A Legacy of Travel Reimagined for the Modern Interior, with New Collections Spanning Furniture, Lighting, Tableware, Textiles, and Games

Source: Louis Vuitton

Reported By: Caroline Dalal

Louis Vuitton, long revered for its mastery of craftsmanship and innovation in luxury travel, now turns its attention more fully toward the home. In 2025, the Maison unveils an ambitious new chapter: the Louis Vuitton Home Collections, a sweeping and curated universe encompassing five distinct categories—furniture and lighting, home decoration and textiles, table arts, Objets Nomades, and a playful yet refined range of exceptional gaming pieces.

This evolution is not a departure but a deepening of Louis Vuitton’s heritage. From the storied Bed Trunk of 1885 to the more recent Objets Nomades, the brand has long engaged in design that bridges function and fantasy. Now, with the introduction of full-fledged home collections, Louis Vuitton positions itself not just as a curator of style, but as an arbiter of domestic culture.

Louis Vuitton Bed Trunk
Louis Vuitton Bed TrunkPhoto Courtesy of Louis Vuitton

A Signature Aesthetic: Where Comfort Meets Couture

The Louis Vuitton Signature Collection, the newly introduced core line of furniture and lighting, articulates a vision of home as both sanctuary and showcase. Each piece balances contemporary lines with unmistakable Louis Vuitton codes—leather accents, monogram motifs, and craftsmanship that recalls the House’s trunk-making heritage.

French designer Patrick Jouin presents a standout: an armchair sheathed in leather, complete with a golden padlock, as if zipped directly from a classic Louis Vuitton trunk. Cristián Mohaded, drawing from his Argentinian roots, brings a sculptural sensitivity and ethnic influence to his furnishings, fusing geometry and emotion in equal measure. Patricia Urquiola, celebrated for her fluid forms, contributes a generously curved armchair and a collection of decorative accessories. And Atelier Biagetti, the Italian duo known for their conceptual flair, unveils a new sinuous lamp defined by its tactile leatherwork and theatrical silhouette.

Objets Nomades: Design as Dreamscape

Continuing its legacy of inviting global designers to reinterpret the spirit of travel, the Objets Nomades series introduces several limited-edition pieces for 2025. Among them, the Kaleidoscope cabinet by Estúdio Campana—a one-off exploration in vibrant blue—pushes the boundaries of cabinet-making into surreal territory. The same design studio also releases new additions to its “Cocoon Couture” series, including the Boitata and Uirapuru, named after mythical creatures and imbued with otherworldly charm.

Louis Vuitton’s 2025 Objets Nomades Features New Campana & Cocoon Designs
Louis Vuitton’s 2025 Objets Nomades Features New Campana and Cocoon DesignsPhoto Courtesy of Louis Vuitton

A House That Plays: Games Reimagined

Louis Vuitton’s design ethos takes a whimsical turn with its exceptional gaming collection. Leading the way is a pinball machine inspired by the irreverent world of Pharrell Williams and his Fall-Winter 2025 men’s runway show. This isn’t merely entertainment—it’s a conversation piece. Other offerings include refined chess and mahjong tables, and a surrealist table football set by Estúdio Campana that references aquatic fantasy with humorous sophistication.

Louis Vuitton - Jamie Hayon: Botanic Collection
Louis Vuitton - Jamie Hayon: Botanic CollectionPhoto Courtesy of Louis Vuitton
Louis Vuitton Bed Trunk
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Objects and Textiles: A Tactile Dialogue with Art History

Among the most poetic entries in the new lineup are the home decorations and textiles, which draw upon both the Louis Vuitton archive and the visual languages of early 20th-century design. A special tribute is paid to Italian Futurist Fortunato Depero and French modernist Charlotte Perriand, whose bold graphics and experimental textiles are reimagined for today’s interiors. The collection includes wool and cashmere plaids, cushions with striking chromatic variations, and rugs that trace the geography of Argentina’s clay mountains and southern glaciers.

Louis Vuitton - Charlotte Perriand: Home Textile Escalade Collection
Louis Vuitton - Charlotte Perriand: Home Textile Escalade CollectionPhoto Courtesy of Louis Vuitton

Patricia Urquiola’s vases and catch-all trays, and Jaime Hayon’s ceramic and leather pieces, round out the selection with sculptural flair and exuberant palettes. Together, they introduce a rhythm of color, material, and form that transforms objects of utility into gestures of beauty.

Louis Vuitton - Patricia Urquiola: Vases Decorative Objects
Louis Vuitton - Patricia Urquiola: Vases Decorative ObjectsPhoto Courtesy of Louis Vuitton

Tableware with Global Influence

The table arts collection continues its expansion, combining traditional craftsmanship with cultural storytelling. The Coiling Collection by Nendo, executed in deep black Limoges porcelain, features subtle reinterpretations of Louis Vuitton’s iconic Monogram. Also included are the Splendor and Constellation lines, along with the sun-drenched Capri collection, each echoing regional aesthetics while remaining resolutely Louis Vuitton in form and refinement.

Louis Vuitton - Nendo: Art of Dining
Louis Vuitton - Nendo: Art of DiningPhoto Courtesy of Louis Vuitton

A Home Worth Traveling Through

This new era of Louis Vuitton home design is not merely an extension of its product line—it is an expression of the brand’s evolving philosophy. Every chair, plate, or textile is infused with the Maison’s unmistakable DNA: an embrace of timeless craftsmanship, a willingness to challenge convention, and a desire to reframe luxury as an everyday art form.

Louis Vuitton - Tableware: Capri Collection
Louis Vuitton - Tableware: Capri CollectionPhoto Courtesy of Louis Vuitton
As the home continues to serve as a canvas for identity and storytelling, Louis Vuitton delivers more than décor. It offers a curated journey through materials, memory, and modernity—a home, in its highest form, as a place to dream.

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