Product: Bala, GAP Waterloo, GAP Picadilly,
GAP Bond, Lisse, Lisse Field, Litras, MEIO

Raquel Pacchini

Raquel Pacchini is a Brazilian-born Italian designer, one of the new multipurpose designers in the world of communication and product design. Raquel has worked as a designer at Studio Urquiola before establishing / àr o / design studio an independent creative consultancy studio based in Milan, founded in 2016 with Andrea Steidl. They work for a range of companies in the fields of art direction, graphic design, installations, and industrial product design.

Using a creative process based on aesthetic, product and strategic research, the / àr o / design studio transforms the ideas and inspirations of its clients into value systems in order to give rise to a fresh perspective on the brand that revolves around the creative direction, products and visual communication.

Designer: Raquel Pacchini

Lisse Field

Changing perspective, hovering up high until hearing the dialogue between colours and geometries. Limited areas circled by knots and straight lines appear like blooming fields that give rhythm to the landscape.
Designer: Raquel Pacchini

Lisse

Changing perspective, hovering up high until hearing the dialogue between colours and geometries. Limited areas circled by knots and straight lines appear like blooming fields that give rhythm to the landscape.
Designer: Raquel Pacchini

GAP – Waterloo

The translation of the parts creates a soft, colourful fracture that makes the geometrical lines a complex, surprising pattern.
Designer: Raquel Pacchini

MEIO

Papel, as the name itself suggests, is a new series of handloomed rugs in paper yarn. Compared to other materials, paper has a completely different charm: once the yearns are loomed, the effect delivered is neat and graphic. At the same time, paper is a natural and sustainable material, easy to cleans, like rattan but much softer. The design of the Papel series is based on the original idea of elaborating simple shapes in a complex way through the colour, and the decomposition of basic elements. Blocks and strips are repeated in an apparently regular fashion, and the main colour is placed next to secondary shades to deceive the eye and create motion. The decomposition of the lines imposed by the loom creates a vibrant game of multicoloured features that, when put together, create multidimensional, staggered patterns. The research for balance between colour and design takes the form of a neutral yet dynamic canvas.
Designer: Raquel Pacchini

Listras

Papel, as the name itself suggests, is a new series of handloomed rugs in paper yarn. Compared to other materials, paper has a completely different charm: once the yearns are loomed, the effect delivered is neat and graphic. At the same time, paper is a natural and sustainable material, easy to cleans, like rattan but much softer. The design of the Papel series is based on the original idea of elaborating simple shapes in a complex way through the colour, and the decomposition of basic elements. Blocks and strips are repeated in an apparently regular fashion, and the main colour is placed next to secondary shades to deceive the eye and create motion. The decomposition of the lines imposed by the loom creates a vibrant game of multicoloured features that, when put together, create multidimensional, staggered patterns. The research for balance between colour and design takes the form of a neutral yet dynamic canvas.
Designer: Raquel Pacchini

Bala

Papel, as the name itself suggests, is a new series of handloomed rugs in paper yarn. Compared to other materials, paper has a completely different charm: once the yearns are loomed, the effect delivered is neat and graphic. At the same time, paper is a natural and sustainable material, easy to cleans, like rattan but much softer. The design of the Papel series is based on the original idea of elaborating simple shapes in a complex way through the colour, and the decomposition of basic elements. Blocks and strips are repeated in an apparently regular fashion, and the main colour is placed next to secondary shades to deceive the eye and create motion. The decomposition of the lines imposed by the loom creates a vibrant game of multicoloured features that, when put together, create multidimensional, staggered patterns. The research for balance between colour and design takes the form of a neutral yet dynamic canvas.