8 Spectacular New Product Collaborations to Shop in February

From a Sabine Marcelis–designed lounger for CC-Tapis to Young Huh’s hand-painted wall coverings for Fromental inspired by Korean folk painting

Minimalist dining room with a wooden table, decorative vase, two tall lamps, a painting, and a single chair against beige walls.
Athena Calderone for Calico Wallpaper. Photo: Courtesy of Calico Wallpaper

Hundreds of innovative home products debut each month, but few embody the brilliance that ensues when two disparate parties put their heads together to create something truly special. Below, Galerie highlights seven product collaborations that captured our attention in February.   

Blue ceramic bowl and pedestal on a red tiled floor with patterned walls in the background.
Devin Wilde for Design Within Reach. Photo: Courtesy of Design Within Reach.
Wooden table with a ceramic vase of thistles, next to bowls and a decorative piece on tiled floor.
Devin Wilde for Design Within Reach. Photo: Courtesy of Design Within Reach

1. Devin Wilde for Design Within Reach 

After expanding his Brooklyn ceramics practice into furniture and securing representation with Lawson-Fenning this past year, Devin Wilde has upped the ante with an exclusive collection for Design Within Reach that brings his architectural eye to tableware and deepens his foray into furniture. The launch introduces Vessel No. IX alongside four new high-gloss glazes developed exclusively for DWR, rendered in primary colors drawn from classic midcentury palettes and informed by Wilde’s close study of urban masonry, arches, and architectural shadowplay. “Some of my glazes are meant to be reminiscent of oxidized metals; the sort of finishes you’d see on Roman metalwares unearthed after two millennia of slowly aging,” Wilde says, adding, “I like to think of these pieces as usable art. I intend for them to be used on a daily basis.” 

Modern living room with red walls, Eames lounge chair, fireplace, and a decorative mural featuring a tree and crane.
Young Huh for Fromental. Photo: Courtesy of Fromental

2. Young Huh for Fromental 

Minhwa, the Korean folk painting tradition that flourished during the Joseon era, provides the visual foundation for Young Huh’s first collaboration with London wall covering atelier Fromental. Titled Soru, the pattern originated as a bespoke commission for the interior designer’s own residence before joining Fromental’s permanent collection, translating symbolic motifs such as peach trees and the scholar’s screen into a contemporary decorative language. Hand-painted imagery drifts across a peach-pink ombré ground, with slender stalks, pine trees, mushrooms, clouds, and a red sun and moon that reference balance and renewal. “What I love about Korean art is how expressive and uninhibited it is, as well as its embrace of intense color,” Huh says. “There is whimsy, humour, and fantasy—but above all, a love of the beautiful.” 

Minimalist room with various colored cylindrical cushions on a concrete floor, and a large backlit panel in the background.
Sabine Marcelis for CC-Tapis. Photo: Alice Beltrami

3. Sabine Marcelis for CC-Tapis 

The debut furniture piece conceived for CC-Tapis isn’t too far removed from the idiosyncratic rugs synonymous with the Milanese atelier’s name. At Studio 84 during Mexico City Art Week, the brand will introduce a limited-edition piece by Sabine Marcelis that propels its award-winning rug-making expertise into exciting new terrain. Conceived as a suspended moment of unrolling, the monochromatic piece—fittingly named Roll—serves simultaneously as rug and seat, its high-quality wool surface supporting the body and a rolled volume contained within translucent resin functioning as a cushioned backrest. Thanks to a process called robo-tufting, the atelier could achieve complex geometries and varied tufting directions beyond traditional methods.  

Ornate chair with blue cushion and patterned seat against a patterned carpet and yellow wall with draped curtain.
Martin Brudnizki for Samuel & Sons. Photo: Courtesy of Samuel & Sons
Elegant draped curtain with decorative tassel tieback near marble wall and patterned carpet, creating a luxurious interior setting.
Martin Brudnizki for Samuel & Sons. Photo: Courtesy of Samuel & Sons

4. Martin Brudnizki for Samuel & Sons 

With its robust portfolio of transportive hospitality projects resolute in their embrace of old-world maximalism, Martin Brudnizki lyrically demonstrates the power of tassels, trim, and tape. For that reason, the Galerie Creative Mind designer makes for an ideal collaborator for passementerie studio Samuel & Sons. Called Romaunt—after the romantic literary genre—the array of ten styles imagined in eight colorways nods to Pre-Raphaelite painters. “They were captivated by nature, detail, and storytelling, and those same qualities felt like a natural starting point for this collection,” Brudnizki says. “Passementerie is, at its heart, about decoration and expression—a finishing touch that can completely transform a room. We’ve drawn on that sense of romance and artistry to create trimmings that feel rich, layered, and full of life.” 

Luxurious modern living room with elegant furniture, soft lighting, large windows, and dark green textured walls.
Athena Calderone for Calico Wallpaper. Photo: Courtesy of Calico Wallpaper

5. Athena Calderone for Calico Wallpaper 

After successful collaborations with Crate & Barrel and Beni Rugs, design tastemaker Athena Calderone has now tried her hand at wall coverings with Cadence, a collection for Calico Wallpaper. Originally conceived for her Tribeca apartment, the series draws on the patina of aged materials, focusing on the translucent surfaces of natural hides translated into wallpaper. Calderone worked closely with Calico co-founder Rachel Cope and a French decorative painter, layering the artisan’s hand-rendered artwork with high-resolution scans of authentic textures to achieve depth and tonal variation. Fine seam lines run across the surface as a nod to historic paneling, while six colorways, from alabaster and porcelain to oxblood and espresso-toned tobacco, position Cadence as a richly considered addition to Calico’s permanent collection.  

Elegant living room with modern furniture, plush sofas, stylish lighting, large windows, and lush greenery outside.
Corey Damen Jenkins for Eichholtz. Photo: Courtesy of Eichholtz

6. Corey Damen Jenkins for Eichholtz 

During an annual buying trip to the Eichholtz showroom in High Point, North Carolina, Corey Damen Jenkins shared early pages from his monograph Design Reimagined and noticed how frequently the brand’s lighting appeared across his projects. That realization sparked Eichholtz’s first-ever designer collaboration, unveiled at Maison & Objet in Paris as a 32-piece lighting collection that spans heirloom-caliber chandeliers, flush mounts, sconces, and table and floor lamps. Drawing from Jenkins’s couture-informed interiors and an archive of hand-drawn lighting studies refined over years, the collection tempers Art Deco–inspired geometry with midcentury sculptural references and nods to the Ancient Egyptians, celestial bodies, and Viennese Secessionism. “The best word to sum up my vision for this collection is renaissance,” explains Damen Jenkins. “It’s a revival of historic concepts and aesthetics that have long been dormant and forgotten, reimagined for the 21st century through a fresh, modern lens.” 

Two green and orange square tiles resting on a textured brown patterned fabric with abstract floral designs.
Eskayel for Clé. Photo: Courtesy of Clé
Blue and white geometric patterned tiles on a gray surface with a single white tulip and black patterned rugs nearby.
Eskayel for Clé. Photo: Courtesy of Clé

7. Eskayel for Clé 

Shanan Campanaro’s far-flung travels have long informed the richly layered paintings she translates into rugs, wall coverings, linens, and furnishings for her San Diego–based brand Eskayel. Her collaboration with Clé continues to bring that painterly sensibility to cement tile. The latest chapter revisits a suite of now-familiar patterns, each inspired by Campanaro’s experiences in nature, rendered in the six-color palette of Clé’s Mythology Collection. Designed to support multiple color combinations, the update casts Eskayel’s hypnotic motifs in vivid new pairings that heighten their visual impact while preserving the hand-driven spirit of the originals. 

Person holding large floral fabric with colorful patterns in an outdoor garden setting.
River of Joy wallpaper by Olef Hajek for Christopher Farr Cloth. Photo: Courtesy of Christopher Farr Cloth
Patterned fabric with colorful abstract figures rolled out on a floor, sunlight casting shadows across the surface.
Dancing Parade wallpaper by Olef Hajek for Christopher Farr Cloth. Photo: Courtesy of Christopher Farr Cloth

8. Olaf Hajek for Christopher Farr Cloth

Known for his lush, surreal visions of flora and fauna, Olaf Hajek has brought his narrative-rich imagery to textiles and wall coverings for Christopher Farr Cloth in a collaboration that unites vivid illustration and meticulous attention to color. The collection comprises two printed linens and four wallpapers, marking the first time the Berlin-based artist’s work has entered the wall covering realm. Designs such as Dancing Parade depict figures clad in floral fragments and bold geometry gathered in celebratory motion, while Trees of Wonder presents a monumental tree of life whose branches bloom with flowers, animals, and insects arranged as a mythic panorama.