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Portuguese design takes center stage today at Paris Design Week, held at Galerie Joseph, 16 Rue des Minimes, running until September 9. The Portuguese showcase, titled “Re.Made in Portugal Naturally”, is organized by AICEP and curated by Nina Andrade. The prefix “RE” reflects the intention to regenerate, reuse, reimagine, and respect the home textile and interiors sector.
Among the companies exhibiting products are Abyss Habidecor, Amalia Home Collection, Burel Factory, Ferreira de Sá, Lameirinho, Lasa Home, Monteiro Fabrics, Pé de Chumbo, and Sampedro.
The catalog emphasizes that these companies do more than produce—they transform, create, and innovate. By valuing ancestral techniques, authentic materials, and sustainable approaches, these brands demonstrate that it is possible to preserve identity while projecting it into the future.
Abyss & Habidecor presents a towel woven in extra-long-staple Giza cotton and piece-dyed. The Serviette Super Pile offers exceptional absorbency, incomparable softness, and a broad palette of 60 long-lasting colors.
Amália Home Collection showcases the Prado model, a 430-thread-count satin made from 100% Egyptian Giza 94 cotton, enhanced with an elegant trim available in multiple colors, considered indispensable in any luxury bedding collection.
From Burel Factory, an ATP member, highlights include the Biombo Onda, a space divider made of burel and wood with high acoustic performance, vases with burel covers, and 100% wool cushions featuring various embroidery techniques.
Lameirinho presents the Silent Eco line, with 100% silk bedding woven in-house, offering subtle sheen and a soft touch, including sheets and duvet covers with tone-on-tone prints. The Zen Mood collection draws inspiration from serene soft hues, combining different textures in 100% cotton, while the bath textile range includes 600 g/m² towels, certified and available in 12 colors. Lasa Home stands out with its Horizon collection, also focused on high-quality bath textiles.
Other projects on display include: Bordal: wood embroidery; Craft Gardens by Marta Ramada Leite: lamps made from regenerated Econyl yarn derived from recycled waste; Blossom Gardenia: a suspended textile sculpture, one meter in diameter, exploring rhythm and balance with a gradient pompom pattern; Darono: transforming textile surpluses into unique furniture pieces using macramé; Pardo Originals: cotton blankets inspired by Portuguese heritage, such as the Manta Vinhedo Canastra, paying homage to rural Portuguese traditions and featuring the national flag colors (red, natural, and green); Pé de Chumbo: an interiors line combining hand weaving, yarn experimentation, and material layering; Sampedro: linen bedding, 100% yarn-dyed, blankets woven from natural and deadstock fibers, and table linens in raw linen that are biodegradable, durable, and soft.
The diversity and creativity of the collections reflect the excellence and dynamism of Portuguese design, combining tradition, innovation, and sustainability, and positioning Portugal as a benchmark in the international textile and interiors landscape.