
Oniro Group returned to Salone del Mobile.Milano 2025 with a comprehensive presentation, reaffirming its international presence in the luxury interiors sector. The group’s showcase included four distinctive design identities. Each brand delivered a clearly defined vision, with influences ranging from classic European artistry to the energy of American desertscapes and nightlife. The installations focused on expressive materiality, architectural detailing, and fashion-rooted design, placing craftsmanship and innovation at the center of their storytelling.

Etro Home Interiors: Past Reframed for the Present
Etro Home Interiors introduced its 2025 Living Lore collection as an exploration of layered histories. The collection plays with the idea of a modern-day cabinet of curiosities, uniting different epochs through textures, materials, and forms. Central to the design approach is a rich interplay of color, pattern, and geometry, allowing the collection to honor its archival references while addressing contemporary living.
The bamboo motif emerges as a design anchor, reimagined through strict lines and antique finishes. The Frame line, which includes coffee tables and the Woodstock sofa, expresses this clarity through sculptural bamboo-inspired structures. The Reed armchair follows suit with an antique brass frame and velvet cushions in the Maison’s signature Nimphea fabric.


Solid materials like marble and wood underscore the weight and permanence of larger pieces. The Pillar table, with cylindrical marble legs and a wooden top, reflects this philosophy. Sofas and armchairs soften the mood, introducing shapes inspired by 1970s lounges. The Retrò sofa becomes a visual centerpiece, using bold colors to reinterpret mid-century comfort through a present-day lens.
Etro’s installation “5 THREADS, 40 YEARS” took over a dimly lit space in Milan, drawing focus to the Arnica pattern. The exhibit maps its transformation from concept to craft across three rooms, reinforcing the brand’s layered aesthetic language.

Gianfranco Ferré Home: Structured Softness
The 2025 Gianfranco Ferré Home collection plays with contrast. Clean architectural lines sit beside plush surfaces, all unified by a fashion-informed approach. Blue, grey, and red dominate the palette, balanced by the warmth of Tay wood. Each piece carries tailored accents, leather straps, buttons, and intricate stitching, reminiscent of menswear.


The Zurich line features slender leather bands and brushed bronze hardware, adding dimension to silver nubuck upholstery. The Bern sofa brings together geometry and softness, surrounded by Greenwich, Chambers, and Queens coffee tables that complete a polished lounge setting.
Material duality drives the design language. Furniture items balance solid structures in wood and metal with the texture of hide and leather. Stitching and detailed finishes, visible across large desks and compact storage units, elevate the utilitarian. The Davos table and Montreux chair provide a clear example: sculpted volumes meet handcrafted detailing, creating a tactile and visually layered composition.

Jumbo Collection: Classical Form, Contemporary Vision
Jumbo Collection returned to Milan with Sculpting Time, a series rooted in French decorative tradition. Carved medallions and gypsum accents draw from classical architecture and museum references, creating an atmosphere of quiet opulence. The exhibit spans living, dining, bedroom, and lounge settings, united by a desire to reinterpret decorative craft through contemporary form.
In the main living area, the Médaillon collection stands out with American walnut, gold finishes, and a chalk-effect medallion. The Idylle sideboard, built upon the Brocart line, contrasts interior walnut tones with laser-engraved gold details that depict imaginary landscapes.


Sofas like the Grand Armée and Crystal bring together traditional silhouettes with updated foundations. Crystal velvet and damask compositions give weight to these pieces, while the Fuji and Dame tables introduce visual rhythm through gold detailing.
Elsewhere, full-scale gypsum busts and statues of Bacchus and Venus de Milo frame a second living room. The dining room centers on the Apollon table, showcasing polychrome marble inlay. The Guirlande sideboard and matching bed set feature carved garlands and columns in maple and gilded wood. Each area reveals a deep engagement with classical iconography without resorting to replication.

Roberto Cavalli Home Interiors: From Desert to Neon
Roberto Cavalli Home Interiors looked to the American West for Glowing Reflections, a collection that channels both the silence of the desert and the overstimulation of Las Vegas. Earth tones dominate the Nevada line, with Red Jasper marble anchoring pieces like the undulating armchairs and sofas.
Soft curves reflect the movement of dunes, while stitched padding and roller armrests nod to Cavalli’s fashion roots. The Sierra armchair adds pleated textures and metallic stud detailing, amplifying its sculptural quality.


In contrast, the Las Vegas-inspired designs pull viewers into a nocturnal narrative. Vivid blues and yellows energize the space, where glass and acrylic meet matte finishes in playful tension. Tahoe tables illustrate this approach through concentric glass layers that create depth and motion.
The Wings Vegas armchair, crafted in white vegan leather and adorned with red, gold, and blue gems, pays homage to the city’s legendary show costumes.
A parallel activation during Fuorisalone placed these key pieces in Moebius Milano, connecting the collection to the city’s creative pulse. Through this two-part expression, Cavalli presents a home vision steeped in material play and theatrical energy.

wow. just wow. certainly there is a client for this ahaha