GreenRow launched a collaboration with the New York Botanical Garden, drawing on NYBG's archival botanical illustrations, including works from the LuEsther T. Mertz Library Rare Book Collection. The GreenRow x NYBG collection focuses on home textiles and décor, spanning wallpaper, bedding, rugs, tabletop items, linens and decorative accessories, with several hand-painted and handwoven pieces anchoring its vintage-inspired aesthetic.
Available at GreenRow's SoHo flagship, online at GreenRow.com and in a limited run at the NYBG Shop in the Bronx, the collection features responsibly sourced materials including linen, cotton and recycled fibers. A launch event at GreenRow SoHo was scheduled for June 10.
GreenRow shows how archive-driven design collaborations can extend a cultural institution's storytelling reach while grounding home goods in authentic artistic heritage.
Botanical Collections
GreenRow Partnered With the New York Botanical Garden on Its Home Décor Line
Trend Themes
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Archive-led Homeware — Digitized rare-book artwork gives décor collections authenticated visual narratives that differentiate mass-market interiors with culturally rooted design.
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Museum-licensed Décor — Cultural partnerships are transforming institutional archives into shoppable product ecosystems that expand audience engagement beyond gallery and garden visits.
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Sustainable Heritage Textiles — Responsibly sourced linens, cottons and recycled fibers bring vintage-inspired aesthetics into alignment with modern expectations for lower-impact home goods.
Industry Implications
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Home Furnishings — Heritage artwork applied across bedding, rugs, wallpaper and tabletop items creates premium assortment strategies built around provenance and collectible design.
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Museum Retail — Limited-run collaborations extend gift shop relevance by linking physical destinations, online commerce and exclusive products tied to institutional identity.
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Textile Manufacturing — Hand-painted and handwoven production methods position artisanal textile capabilities as a differentiator for brands seeking elevated, archive-informed collections.