Turri’s Living Concept: Bow and Atelier in Conversation
- Style Essentials Edit Team

- 1 hour ago
- 2 min read

Turri has always treated the home as a place where design and personality overlap, and its newest interpretation of living unfolds through two collections that speak to each other without losing their individual character. Bow, designed by Studio Milo under the creative direction of Arianna Crosetta, and Atelier, created by Matteo Nunziati, come together as parallel versions of Turri’s modern luxury—distinct in expression, yet aligned in language.
What ties the two collections together is not uniformity but an ease of dialogue. Turri approaches its living concept as an open system, where each piece can stand alone but also sit naturally beside another. The soft, enveloping lines of the Bow poufs settle comfortably next to the refined presence of the Atelier display cabinet, and the transition between the two feels effortless. Materials and finishes overlap in small, quiet ways, creating a shared visual rhythm across spaces meant for everyday use.
In the living area, Bow brings an intimacy that doesn’t rely on ornamentation. The poufs have a rounded, almost sculpted softness that invites use without demanding attention. Leather and fabric surfaces define their softness, grounding them in the tactile pleasure that Turri is known for. Even the Bow vases follow this vocabulary—simple, elegant shapes that echo the curves of the seating pieces and reinforce a sense of cohesion.

Atelier, on the other hand, has a more architectural presence. The collection shows Nunziati’s precision—clean lines, careful detailing, and materials chosen for their quiet richness. The display cabinet becomes more than a storage piece; it works as a point of focus within the room. Leather finishes, subtle stitching, and the balance between open and closed elements speak directly to Turri’s craftsmanship. The floor mirror from the same collection subtly shifts the room’s atmosphere by extending light and adding depth without dominating the space. Wood and leather, the signature materials of the collection, create a contemporary expression that still feels rooted in Italian tradition.
Both collections share a fundamental trait: attention to detail. This is where Turri’s Made in Italy identity shows most clearly. The brand has always emphasised material quality and finish, and here the approach is consistent—every join, surface, curve, and edge is considered. Yet there is nothing overly perfect about the spaces they create. The idea is comfort with clarity, elegance without excess.
Bow and Atelier together map out what Turri considers modern luxury today. It’s less about showpieces and more about how the home actually feels when someone lives in it. The pieces respond to the habits and tempo of everyday life, expressing refinement through touch, proportion, and atmosphere rather than grand gestures.
This is the quiet confidence behind Turri’s living concept: a home shaped not only by design but by the people who inhabit it. The collections don’t impose a style—they create room for one. In that sense, a Turri home doesn’t just accommodate someone’s life. It reflects it, carries it, and evolves with it.
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