Kelly Wearstler x H&M Home Is Bringing Sculptural Modular Design to Milan Design Week

by Gabriella Gabbi

Kelly Wearstler brings a distinctly American design perspective to H&M Home with a sculptural modular furniture collection launching at Milan Design Week 2026. Defined by soft curves, tonal palettes, and fluid, adaptable forms, the collection translates her signature language into a more accessible context. The result is a refined vision of modern living, where flexibility, form, and quiet luxury come together with ease.

What Is the Kelly Wearstler x H&M Home Collection?

At its core, the collection is built around modularity. Think adaptable sofas, interchangeable elements, and pieces designed to evolve with the space around them.

This isn’t flat-pack furniture dressed up as design. It’s a considered approach to form and proportion:

  • Low-slung silhouettes with architectural presence
  • Soft, curved volumes that feel sculptural rather than decorative
  • A tonal palette grounded in neutrals, stone, and warm earth hues
  • Materials that mimic the tactility of high-end interiors

The result is furniture that feels both elevated and accessible, a balance that’s notoriously difficult to achieve.

kelly-wearstler-hm-home-modular-sofa-shophomestyles

Credit: H&M

Why This Launch Matters

Milan Design Week has long been the benchmark for where design is heading. For a high street brand like H&M Home to debut here signals a broader shift in the industry. This collaboration sits at the intersection of three key movements:

  • Modular Living as the New Standard
    Flexible furniture is no longer niche. It reflects how people actually live. Spaces are fluid, multifunctional, and constantly evolving.
  • High-Low Design Is Maturing
    This is not about imitation. It’s about translation. Wearstler’s signature language is distilled, not diluted.
  • Sculptural Forms Go Mainstream
    What was once reserved for collectible design is becoming more widely available. Curves, volume, and presence now define everyday interiors.
kelly-wearstler-hm-home-milan-design-week-shophomestyles

Credit: H&M

Kelly Wearstler’s Design Language, Reimagined

Known for her bold use of material, form, and contrast, Kelly Wearstler has built a career on interiors that feel deeply personal yet instantly recognisable. In this collection, that language is softened and more refined, shifting away from maximalism toward a quieter sense of restraint.

The focus moves to proportion over ornament, with pieces designed to layer effortlessly rather than dominate a space. It reflects a broader move toward warm minimalism and quiet luxury, where impact comes from shape, texture, and subtle composition rather than excess.

kelly-wearstler-hm-home-milan-design-week-shophomestyles

Credit: H&M

What to Expect From the Drop

While the full collection rollout is tied to Milan Design Week, early previews suggest a focus on:

  • Modular seating systems
  • Accent chairs with sculptural profiles
  • Low tables and surfaces with architectural lines
  • Textural soft furnishings to complete the look

Each piece is designed to work individually, but more importantly, together.

kelly-wearstler-hm-home-milan-design-week-shophomestyles

Credit: H&M

The Future of Accessible Design

This collaboration signals something bigger than a single launch. It reflects a growing demand for interiors that feel considered, curated, and design-led without being inaccessible.

For H&M Home, it elevates the brand into a more design-conscious space. For Kelly Wearstler, it’s an expansion of her aesthetic into a new, broader context.

And for the industry, it reinforces a clear direction: good design is no longer exclusive, but it still needs to feel intentional.

Where and When to Buy the Collection

The Kelly Wearstler x H&M Home collection will launch on September 3rd, 2026, following its debut at Milan Design Week. The modular furniture range will be available online via H&M Home and H&M, as well as through Kelly Wearstler’s own website, marking a wider global rollout.

Positioning the collection as a key moment in the 2026 interiors calendar, the launch is expected to generate significant demand, with pieces likely to sell quickly once released.