15th January 2026 | IN PRODUCT NEWS | BY SBID Share Tweet Pinterest LinkedIn A wealth of expressive experience animates the 2026 Dedar Collection, backed up by design flair and textile knowhow. Within the collection itself, plain and patterned fabrics become the focal elements of heterogeneous and innovative projects, while adding new dimensions to the imagination of interior designers. The 2026 collection goes beyond any naturalistic or figurative element; it visits abstract art and even embraces conceptual suggestions. The visual recount mingles logic, graphic design, and colour. With forays into the battles of Bayeux and the dense allegoric compositions of the Manufacture des Gobelins, a centuries-old tradition provides new vital buds. These generate geometric tangles and paradoxical graphic circuits, comprising references to the works of Renzo Piano for the Centre Pompidou and parallel universes in which random kaleidoscopic patterns fall into impossible configurations. Living spaces and projects open to multiplicity — endowed with the ability to transform contrasts into harmony – are those that will benefit most from the plain fabrics in this collection. Here, simplicity and materiality grasp a delicate equilibrium; quiet and silence find their counterpoint in lavish palettes made up of bright colours and pastel shades. Extremely soft and sumptuous mohair fabrics and silk canvas weaves that are bold, but never brash, lend themselves to interior design projects which similarly offset contrasting virtues and aspirations. A meticulous and refined yarn construction upholds the elegance, softness, and sheer pleasure of an extremely sleek drape. Harmonious and regular, the surface rhythm accompanies the weight of satins, velvets, and canvas weaves. Drapey fabrics – of various fibres, weave structures and colours – express fluidity and precision, without stiffness. Perfectly balanced between a formal and informal character, between repose and chromatic verve, the same plain fabrics that their users find warm and snug are equally good at responding to the complex requirements of projects consisting of multiple elements. Contemporary life and historical contexts, abstract and figurative art are once more brought together to provide the ideal tools for interior design projects that confidently handle multiple influences and periods. Hence, the textile element plays a decisive role in a snug and comfortable living space, along with pictures, photographs, and other personal objects. The depth of time becomes the fulcrum of an extremely profound expressive and decorative system. Métro Beaubourg Dedar Music: A Drapey and Textural Wool Satin Expresses Tradition with Verve Its flowing drape speaks of sartorial expertise. This pure virgin wool satin combines classical elegance with an assertive character. It recalls David Byrne’s big suit: exuberant, iconic, and exquisitely cut for an oversized aesthetic that is both disconcerting and appealing. The surface is rippled: decidedly far removed from the mere smoothness of ordinary satin. Its colour range is vast and variegated, engaging traditional haute couture in a dialogue with contemporary design, to confer yet more verve to its personality. Entente Cordiale: An Easy-Going Silky Canvas Weave with Bourette Accents A fabric that is perfectly silky yet not quite satin smooth. Its confident elegance derives from the combination of a slinky drape and the natural imperfection of bourette yarn – whose defining effect is that of certain lived-in details that make for an impeccable outfit. It enhances several types of environments, from town houses in the Art Deco style to the quiet dignity of a Parisian château, or the minimalist design of a Midtown Manhattan apartment. In the reinterpretation of classical decor in a contemporary language, it brings the pastel colours of a fresh and vibrant palette to the design project. Entente Cordiale There There: Vibrant Alpine Liseré A form of beauty whose attraction is immediate and direct, just like a snowy pinnacle. This liseré plays peekaboo with the warp; with an almost calligraphic stroke, it traces a pared-down and enigmatic alpine profile. The never-ending recount of mankind’s relationship with mountains – myths, depictions, and stories – opens up a new textile chapter. As in a painting by Friedrich, or a black and white photograph by Burkhard, the icon becomes vibrant matter. This was an expressive challenge Dedar could not possibly resist – “because it’s there”, as Mallory explained after climbing Everest. Textural and, of course, with slub knots, the look of There is warm and rich in contrast. Métro Beaubourg: A Contemporary Tapestry Defined by Original Graphic Strokes An original rendering. An architectural and graphic rigour links the chromatic tangle of the Centre Pompidou and a Métro map. The weave structure recalls the Gobelins tapestries, but its design revolutionizes both language and visual impact, while poised between familiarity and jamais vu. The palette explores two different characters, one consisting of bright colours that nod to Modernism, alongside another of more delicate shades imbued with the rarefied elegance of Art Deco. The regular ribs of canneté permeate the fabric with a subtle three-dimensionality. Métro Beaubourg Annodo Arcobaleni Annodo Arcobaleni: A Neo-Tapestry with Unexpected Geometric Motifs A contemporary tapestry that inhabits a borderland between familiarity and the unprecedented. The weft threads paint a kaleidoscope whose colours have magically found an orderly arrangement; however, in this apparent regularity, unexpected interlacings interrupt the geometric motifs. Colour nuances are arranged in sequence with a subtle transition. The polychromatic tangle invites us to decipher or even unravel them. The solid textural structure of the fabric recalls the tapisserie tradition, with forays into Beauvais and the Gobelins; the play of graphic motifs and colours reinterpret this tradition in a warm, three-dimensional reps fabric poised between lustrous and matt effects. About Dedar Founded in 1976, Dedar is a family-run fabric house located close to Como, in the heart of a manufacturing district. Dedar experiments and innovates to attain product perfection through an ongoing dialogue with those craftsmen and textile specialists who are most familiar with the techniques employed in the production of excellent fabrics. Characterized by seductive colour palettes and unexpected patterns, Dedar’s fabrics combine precious yarns with research into fiber technology to offer various solutions for curtains, upholstery and wallcovering of timeless elegance. 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