La Dolce Vita, reimagined

Perennials’ Spring 2026 collection translates the Italian art of living into tactile design, where fabrics, rugs, and wallcoverings capture the poetry of everyday moments

La Dolce Vita by Perennials
La Dolce Vita by Perennials

Perennials’ Spring 2026 collection, La Dolce Vita, is less about decoration and more about atmosphere. Rooted in the Italian coast’s slow rhythms, it builds a sensory language where design becomes a way of living rather than simply styling a space.  The collection unfolds like a summer afternoon. Sheer curtains move with the breeze, tables are set under olive trees, and color feels sun-warmed rather than applied. It draws from simple rituals, aperitivo hour, shared meals, and quiet pauses, transforming them into patterns, textures, and materials that feel both familiar and elevated.

Tessuto Nonna
Nonna textile
Tessuto Bambino
Bambino textile

Across fabrics, gingham returns with nuance. Designs like Nonna and Bambino revisit classic checks but soften them through tonal blending and chenille textures, giving them depth and tactility. Meanwhile, Al Fresco introduces botanical motifs with meandering vines and pomegranates, balancing vibrancy with restraint.

Tessuto Al Fresco
Al Fresco textile

There is a clear emphasis on material innovation. Textiles such as Aria and Farfalla integrate bio-based yarns derived from sugarcane by-products, merging performance with sustainability. This approach positions the collection within a contemporary design conversation, where beauty is inseparable from responsibility.

Tessuto Aria
Aria textile
Tessuto Farfalla
Farfalla textile

Rugs extend this narrative onto the floor, turning surfaces into living compositions. From the fluid movement of Flutter to the structured geometry of Viva, each piece is crafted to feel dynamic, as if shaped by light and motion rather than fixed design.

Tappeto Flutter
Flutter rugh
Tappeto Viva
Viva rugh

Wallcoverings complete the environment, shifting walls into expressive planes. Whether through the painterly abstraction of Tinta or the rhythmic linearity of Wave Length, surfaces become immersive rather than passive, reinforcing the idea that interiors should be experienced, not just seen.

Tessuto Tinta
Tinta

What defines La Dolce Vita is its refusal to overstate. Instead, it builds a quiet richness through detail, texture, and memory. It suggests that luxury today is not excess, but the ability to slow down, to notice, and to live beautifully within the everyday.