8 Brilliant New Product Collaborations to Shop in November 

From Moniomi’s dazzling collection of polished brass lighting fixtures to a sleek edit of marbles, quartzites, and onyxes curated by Róisín Lafferty

Cozy living room with large window, comfortable sofa, unique chandelier, wooden furniture, and a view of trees and sky.
Cortney Bishop for Amadi Carpets. Photo: Courtesy of Amadi Carpets

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 eight product collaborations that captured our attention in November.   

Abstract sculpture on a pedestal next to a brown leather chair on a patterned rug in a cozy room.
Cortney Bishop for Amadi Carpets. Photo: Courtesy of Amadi Carpets
Dining area with wooden table and chairs, wall art with desert scene, hanging textiles, and a vase with flowers.
Cortney Bishop for Amadi Carpets  Photo: Courtesy of Amadi Carpets

1. Cortney Bishop for Amadi Carpets 

The graphic, geometric patterns of Swedish textiles were the muse for Cortney Bishop’s debut collection for Adami Carpets, which includes 14 handwoven rug styles emblematic of the Charleston talent’s penchant for expressive interiors. Bishop, who grounded the palette in earthy greens, rich browns, golden tones, and warm peach hues, strove to achieve patterns that “feel soulful and lived-in, with a sense of rhythm and contrast that adds real depth and character to a space.” Each wool and silk rug is meticulously handcrafted by Amadi’s expert artisans using hand-dyed threads and generational weaving techniques.  

Blue modern sofa on light wood floor in a minimalistic room with curved white walls and natural lighting.
Biboni sofa from Johnston Marklee. Photo: Courtesy of Knoll

2. Johnston Marklee for Knoll  

Sharon Johnston and Mark Lee, the founders of architecture firm Johnston Marklee, have a special knack for shaping space into arresting volumes and curves. Biboni, their debut sofa for Knoll, follows suit with a playful sense of poise. Plush scallops and soft folds are shaped into an anthropomorphic form that supports and embraces the user, its gentle curves commanding attention from afar. “There’s an elegance in how the sofa relates to the body,” says Johnston, who notes how the puffy folds are precisely placed for extra cushioning. The collection includes three sofa sizes—two seater, three seater, and four seater—with the option to add a chaise. 

Elegant living room with textured fireplace, tropical mural, wall sconces, and floral arrangement in a stylish vase.
Moniomi for Corbett Lighting. Photo: Courtesy of Corbett Lighting
Cozy living room corner with decorative wall art, plush cushion, and small wooden shelf adorned with a vase of flowers.
Moniomi for Corbett Lighting. Photo: Courtesy of Corbett Lighting

3. Moniomi for Corbett Lighting 

Monica Santayana and Ronald Alvarez, the husband-and-wife founders of Miami studio Moniomi, have turned heads with exuberant, material-rich interiors dripping in riotous patterns and eye-popping colors. Their debut collection for Corbett Lighting sees the duo prove that great maximalism indeed can be governed by elegance and restraint. The collection features eight sculptural families, each imbued with its own visual story: Solara, a dazzling polished brass chandelier, captures the entrancing poetry of distant constellations; the Vela sconce floats a luminous slice of pink onyx against the wall, suspended by a loop recalling a dangling earring.   

Abstract mosaic pattern with small black and white tiles and various colored geometric shapes scattered throughout.
Alison Rose for Artistic Tile. Photo: Courtesy of Artistic Tile
Spacious room with a record player, bookshelves, large window, and geometric patterned floor tiles.
Alison Rose for Artistic Tile. Photo: Courtesy of Artistic Tile

4. Alison Rose for Artistic Tile 

Alison Rose and Artistic Tile are old friends, having joined forces on a slate of mesmerizing stone collections such as the Bauhaus-inspired Euclid and the undulating, dimensional Zephyr since first collaborating in 2019. Their fifth outing together sees the New York interior designer sate her curiosity for the stories embedded in Roman architecture. The aptly named Artifact combines tumbled chips and shapes with honed tesserae mosaics into an eye-catching pattern that rivals its ancient inspiration in beauty, yet realized in tones befitting contemporary interiors.  

Brown textured rug with wavy edges on a white floor surface.
Shawn Henderson for ALT for Living. Photo: Courtesy of ALT for Living
Geometric brown rug with triangular cut-out patterns forming a circle at the center and a border design.
Shawn Henderson for ALT for Living. Photo: Courtesy of ALT for Living

5. Shawn Henderson for ALT for Living 

Shawn Henderson’s sculptural new rug collection studies how form and absence can shape a room’s atmosphere. Each handwoven piece pairs wool and silk in sculpted geometries that reveal glimpses of the floor below, adding dimensionality through carved cutouts and layered textures. Henderson drew on his longstanding fascination with triangular forms and his desire to rethink how rugs function. “I was really inspired by the idea of adding dimensionality to rugs,” he says. “I created a combination of patterns—some rooted in traditional rug design and others more contemporary and random.” 

Contemporary art installation with large textured panels hanging in a modern space with wood floors and soft lighting.
Carla Cascales Alimbau for Armadillo. Photo: Courtesy of Armadillo

6. Carla Cascales Alimbau for Armadillo 

Carla Cascales Alimbau infuses Armadillo’s new Gaia collection with forms shaped by weathered terrain, shifting light, and the softened contours found in the Catalonian artist’s paintings and resin works. Hand-knotted wool creates the carved movement of Marea, while Alma adopts tonal transitions produced through a selective oxidation process that gives each rug a distinct patina. Cirrus introduces plush bands that rise and settle calmly. “In this collection, every knot, every thread carries intention,” she says. “Nothing was rushed or accidental.”   

Artistic depiction of fruit trees and flowers against a blue sky, resembling an ancient fresco style.
Beata Heuman for De Gournay. Photo: Courtesy of de Gournay

7. Beata Heuman for de Gournay 

Beata Heuman recently reshaped de Gournay’s resplendent Upper East Side showroom into an atmospheric showcase of her richly layered vision, complete with furniture and lighting from her celebrated Shoppa collection. The installation also introduces two wallpapers created for the brand. Fruit Garden draws from the blossoming trees and birdsong outside her Swedish countryside home, rendered as a hand-painted tableau alive with summer abundance. Delft Folly presents a diamond-pane motif that recalls classic Delft tiles in a vivid blue and white palette, extending across the ceiling to amplify its graphic impact.   

Person in a red coat standing on a large rock with a rugged cliff background.
Róisín Lafferty. Photo: Courtesy of Aria Stone Gallery
Aerial view of abstract green and white patterns resembling marbled terrain with swirling textures.
Róisín Lafferty for Aria Stone Gallery. Photo: Courtesy of Aria Stone Gallery

8. Róisín Lafferty for Aria Stone Gallery 

Róisín Lafferty brings her sculptural eye to an exclusive new collection for Aria Stone Gallery, curating a dozen marbles, quartzites, and onyxes she personally sourced from Italian quarries. The dazzling assortment reflects the Irish designer’s fascination with natural stone as a medium imbued with emotion and narrative presence, a sensibility that mirrors her interiors. Rich greens nod to her Irish roots, while soft pinks, warm creams, and luminous neutrals broaden the palette with nuanced variation. Lafferty, who describes the collaboration as “a beautiful meeting of minds,” came away with renewed admiration for the craft. “Natural stone is the most beautiful material we get to work with in interiors,” she says. “It’s nature’s own art.”