La Prima Notte di Quiete: Dimorestudio Creates a Cinematic Sanctuary
La Prima Notte di Quiete: Dimorestudio Transforms the Loro Piana House into a Cinematic Sanctuary.
Milan Design Week, 2025
Image:Andrea Ferrari
At this year’s Milan Design Week, Dimorestudio crafts a surreal, sensory narrative with La Prima Notte di Quiete—a poetic, cinematic installation for Loro Piana Interiors that defies expectation and gently pulls visitors into an alternate reality.
Unfolding like a film, the Loro Piana House becomes a sequence of intimate scenes—an entrance, a dining room, a living room, a bedroom, a bathroom, and even a secluded garden—each space layered with immersive quietude and textured elegance. This is not a showcase; it’s an experience. A cocoon from Milan’s intensity. A soft world built to protect.
Image:Andrea Ferrari
Muted earth tones and tactile natural materials—cashmere, wool, velvet, sisal—wrap each room in understated luxury. The palette soothes, while textures speak louder than any ornamentation. Carpeting underfoot, plush fabrics on upholstery, the glint of refined tableware: every surface, every corner, whispers calm.
The installation’s title, La Prima Notte di Quiete (The First Night of Quiet), is as much a mood as it is a motif. It channels the tension between stillness and movement, real and imagined—a direct nod to cinematic atmospheres. Dimorestudio doesn’t just design a house; they direct it, allowing objects and environments to act like characters in a world suspended between reality and suggestion.
Dimorestudio Founders: Britt Moran and Emiliano Salci
Inside, a blend of Loro Piana’s latest interior pieces—from bespoke furniture to heritage tableware—meets vintage finds and standout designs by Dimoremilano, all cloaked in the maison’s signature textiles. The result is a fully furnished home that’s immersive, sophisticated, and irresistibly tactile.
Image:Andrea Ferrari
Anchoring the visual dialogue are curated artworks from Tornabuoni Art, Cardi Gallery, Galleria Gracis, and Secci Gallery, adding layers of narrative to the space without breaking its hush.
Photographed by Andrea Ferrari, the installation’s storytelling is complete—at once architectural and emotional, sensual and serene. In a week defined by bold launches and visual noise, La Prima Notte di Quiete offers a welcome, cinematic silence.