With organic shapes and evocative names, design brings spring into our homes, thanks to a creativity that is inspired by the small miracles of beauty that nature offers us. Formal details, colors, ability to communicate are the distinctive features of these projects that make possible a little great magic: bring an idea of the garden inside, the sweet image of life in the open air, the discovery of the intense beauty of the flora and fauna. But not only: furnishings and accessories inspired by nature are also bearers of irony and originality, of unexpected shapes that will be appreciated by those in search of something truly special.

1. The Feathers  carpet by Maarten De Ceulaer for  CC-Tapis

Feathers by CC-Tapis

Freedom in the flutter of wings that unfold by showing enchanting color combinations, iridescent and magical. The beauty of a bird's plumage is indeed the decorative motif of the collection of Feathers rugs, by Maarten De Ceulaer for CC-Tapis, in cotton, Himalayan wool and silk, knotted to mother. To create this particular motif, the designer has isolated and combined images of various specimens to then translate the resulting combinations into weaving. An enchantment for the eyes and a hymn to nature.

2. Twitty  table by Angeletti Ruzza for Da a

Twitty by Da a

The theme of birds is declined in a different but equally poetic way from Angeletti Ruzza's Twitty table for Da a. A real sculpture in which the structure of the table seems to remember the stylized lines of a tree, while a ceramic bird rests on one of the two legs. The top of the table is in calacatta marble, a further tribute to the beauty of nature's gifts.

3. Cicognino  coffee table by Franco Albini  for  Cassina

Cicognino by Cassina

Despite the essentiality of its lines, the Cicognino table is familiar and reassuring: one of the three legs that support the round top continues beyond the top itself and then ends with a handle useful for moving the table itself. This small detail gives the whole an animated look, reminiscent of the features of a small long-billed stork.

4. Butterfly  stool by Sori Yanagi for  Vitra

Butterfly by Vitra

In maple wood, or rosewood, the Butterfly stool was designed in 1956 by Sori Yanagi, but its lines continue to be current. The movement and lightness draw inspiration from the pose of a butterfly, ready to take flight and to unfold its wings with a curved and graceful profile.

5. Borghese  sofa by Noé Duchaufour Lawrance for  La Chance

Borghese by La Chance

From the animal world we move on to the vegetable world, starting with a sofa inspired by the pines of Villa Borghese in Rome: the intertwining of the branches transforms into the steel supporting structure, the foliage, on the other hand, is perfectly evoked by the seats and backrest, which represent it in geometric shape. Showing the structural elements and using them as a decorative pretext is a recurring motif in the La Chance collections.

6. Tulip  armchair by Marcel Wanders  for  Cappellini

From the pines of Villa Borghese to the tulips, with the Tulip armchair by Marcel Wanders, intensely evocative of the flowers symbol of spring in Holland. An interpretation in full Wanders style, with elongated and dramatized shapes: the shell is in fiberglass and resin; the padding is made of polyurethane foam and foam, the base is swivel (on the cover).

7. Chlorophilia  by Ross Lovegrove for  Artemide

Chlorophilia by Artemide

We conclude with a lamp inspired by chlorophyll, the lifeblood of the plant world. And this perfect example of a fusion of technology and beauty with a scenographic and light effect is truly an enchantment for the eyes.

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