Watercolor Stone-Based Collections

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Patricia Urquiola Designs he Aquarel Collection for Budri

Patricia Urquila Designs the new Aquarel collection for Budri, which highlights a material that was used in architecture due to its natural strength in history. It skillfully plays with watercolor-like tones that contrast against the cool stone material. The capsule was unveiled during Salone del Mobile at Milan Design Week this year.

Patricia Urqiola speaks about the collection, stating "Every project born with Budri is the result of a four-handed research, a creative gymnasium that always leads us to new languages ​​that I would never have imagined could be created with marble. With Aquarel, we started from the symbiosis between a widely used material in architecture, such as Travertine, and the delicate transparency of white Onyx. Exploring how these materials dialogue together, we have created a game of transparencies, contrasts, but also of chromatic nuances and harmonious coexistence."
Trend Themes
1. Stone-based Watercolor Designs - This trend highlights a possible shift towards more artistic and colorful applications of natural stone materials in architectural and interior design.
2. Transparency and Contrast - With the use of materials like Travertine and white Onyx, this trend showcases the potential of exploring the interplay between transparency and contrast in design.
3. Collaborative Material Research - The Aquarel collection exemplifies the power of collaboration between designers and manufacturers in pushing the boundaries of what is possible with natural materials like stone.
Industry Implications
1. Architecture - The Aquarel collection suggests that there may be new opportunities for incorporating stone into architectural designs in creative and aesthetically pleasing ways.
2. Interior Design - The use of watercolor-like tones in stone-based designs could spark a trend in interior design that prioritizes artwork-inspired aesthetics in natural materials.
3. Material Manufacturing - This trend highlights the potential for material manufacturers to collaborate with designers to create unique and innovative products that push the limits of traditional material applications.

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