Daily News
From Home Furnishing Business
Maharam Features Over Fifteen Textiles at 3daysofdesign
June 16,
2026 by Karen Parrish in Business Strategy, Designer Weekly, Industry
This June, during 3daysofdesign in Copenhagen, Maharam features over fifteen textiles from Knoll Textiles and Maharam on Stick Frame, a modular presentation system by Leon Ransmeier, as well as Edelman leathers upholstered on several bespoke objects by the Paris-based designer Robert Stadler.
A part of FRAMING, a building-wide exhibition at The Odd Fellow Palace, the installation enlists a new configuration of Ransmeier’s Stick Frame to present new and recent introductions from Knoll Textiles and Maharam. Highlights from Knoll Textiles include new upholsteries and architectural window coverings that honor Florence Knoll’s legacy of championing both traditional and experimental weaving techniques. Maharam will preview graphic indoor/outdoor upholsteries, textural explorations in saturated tones from an ongoing collaboration with fashion designer Sander Lak, a dynamic, tailored stripe from Paul Smith, and the final textile of the longstanding collaboration with Dutch designer Hella Jongerius.
Designed in 2025 as a perennial display, Stick Frame enlists a reconfigurable grid assembled from stainless-steel tubing. Reflecting a shared commitment to reducing the environmental impact of designing, fabricating, and shipping bespoke installations, the adaptable structure enables the architectural shaping of space within space, while its industrial materials offer a visual counterpoint to woven textiles.
With three organic forms titled Freeze Frames, Stadler explores the shifting of established furniture categories, continuing a line of inquiry first begun with iconic works like Pools & Pouf!, Tephra Formations, and Monochromes. Upholstered in nuanced Edelman leather Royal Hide, the pieces capture what Stadler calls a “frozen instant of dynamic motion” with unconventional shapes that occupy the thin line between furniture and critical statement. Stadler’s distinctive upholstery approach enlists 3-D modeling to apply traditional tufts only where structurally necessary, creating abstract formations that emphasize the inherent movement and tactility of leather.