My Decospan

Milan design week 2026 - what the floor told us

Every April, Milan holds up a mirror to the design industry. This year, the reflection was unmistakable: the era of restraint is over. 

Trend spotter Marieke Desmet spent the week walking Salone del Mobile and returned with three observations that point in the same direction. Not as isolated trend signals, but as different expressions of a single, collective shift in appetite.

Decospan present at Milano design week

Back to the roots

The most consistent thing across the fair floor this year was material honesty

Surfaces stripped to their elemental state. Grain left exposed. Growth rings treated as sculpture rather than something to work around. A coffee table base that was clearly once a burned tree trunk. A console supported by raw, spalted wood legs beneath a single sheet of teal glass. 

Marieke Desmet - Sales manager Decospan
Marieke Desmet

Trend spotter Decospan

“What struck me most was how openly designers were showing where materials come from. Nobody was trying to hide the origin or the expressive character, they were celebrating it.”

For those working with wood veneer, this is not a new conversation

The figure in a walnut panel, the movement in a burl, the quiet depth of a straight-grained oak. These have always told the story of where the material came from.

What changed in Milan this year is that the rest of the industry started listening to it. The material that announces its own history no longer needs ornamentation. In 2026, that became the aspiration.

Decospan visit at Milano design week
Decospan visit at Milano design week - wood trend
Decospan visit at Milano design week

Bold statement colours

If the past years belonged to quiet luxury – japandi, the greige palette, the room that refused to commit – Milan 2026 announced its opposite with full confidence. Deep oxblood walls. Lacquered olive green from floor to ceiling. Saturated crimson environments where colour was not an accent but the architecture itself. 

"Demure is a thing of the past," Marieke observed on the floor. "In Milan, colour wasn't a detail anymore, it was the whole room. One stand wrapped everything in high-gloss dark red, top to bottom. It didn't feel excessive. It felt completely intentional." 

The implication for wood specification is direct. The darker, richer tones that designers have sometimes treated as bold choices – the smoked finishes, the deep browns, the near-blacks – are no longer the exception. They are where the conversation is going. Milan gave architects and interior designers permission to commit, and the question now is whether specifications are keeping pace.

Decospan spotted trends at Milano design week
Decospan spotted trends at Milano design week
Decospan spotted trends at Milano design week
Decospan spotted trends at Milano design week
Decospan spotted trends at Milano design week

Too much is not enough

The third signal was harder to name but impossible to miss. A chair combining bouclé upholstery on one side with a burl wood exterior panel on the other. A walnut sideboard with an undulating silhouette that felt more like a landform than a piece of furniture. Botanical prints edged with dusty rose fringe. Tiger motifs running across ottomans and wall-sized rugs simultaneously. 

"Nobody was holding back," says Marieke. "Designers stopped editing. The restraint of the last few years has run its course and what replaced it is a lot more interesting." 

For wood, this means the heavily figured surfaces, the dramatic grain, the intentional use of sap wood. These belong fully in this moment. The material that has something to say should be allowed to say it. 

Decospan spotted trends at Milano design week
Decospan spotted trends at Milano design week
Decospan spotted trends at Milano design week
Decospan spotted trends at Milano design week
Decospan spotted trends at Milano design week
Decospan visit at Milano design week

Design is becoming more honest

Taken together, Marieke's three observations point to the same underlying shift. 

Design is becoming more honest, more committed and less afraid of its own character. At Decospan, that is a conversation we have been having for a long time. It's good to see Milan catching up.