During Milan’s design week, several fashion boutiques hosted furnishing exhibitions. Clan, on Via Pontaccio, presented Hagit Pincovici’s mixed-material collection, which featured many pieces made of plexi-glass. Pincovici, a designer born in Tel Aviv, hails from a family involved in artisan production since the early seventies. After receiving her diploma, during her first years at the Bezalel Accademy in Jerusalem, Hagit began creating her own interpretation of her family’s tradition. After acquiring a knowledge of Italian manufacturing during a Master’s at Milan’s Domus Academy, she began to carve out her own identity through her combinations of diverse materials. She has collaborated with Italian companies, including Colé and Miniforms, and the Future Perfect showroom in New York City. Her new collections presented in Milan represent a bridge between classic and contemporary, traditional artisan production and advanced technology. The pieces are limited edition, and each exhibits an array of colours and particular attention to detail.

WHERE: Via Pontaccio, 15, 20121 Milano

During Milan’s design week, several fashion boutiques hosted furnishing exhibitions. Clan, on Via Pontaccio, presented Hagit Pincovici’s mixed-material collection, which featured many pieces made of plexi-glass. Pincovici, a designer born in Tel Aviv, hails from a family involved in artisan production since the early seventies. After receiving her diploma, during her first years at the Bezalel Accademy in Jerusalem, Hagit began creating her own interpretation of her family’s tradition. After acquiring a knowledge of Italian manufacturing during a Master’s at Milan’s Domus Academy, she began to carve out her own identity through her combinations of diverse materials. She has collaborated with Italian companies, including Colé and Miniforms, and the Future Perfect showroom in New York City. Her new collections presented in Milan represent a bridge between classic and contemporary, traditional artisan production and advanced technology. The pieces are limited edition, and each exhibits an array of colours and particular attention to detail.

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The Moodboarders is a glance into the design world, which, in all of its facets, captures the extraordinary even within the routine. It is a measure of the times. It is an antenna sensitive enough to pick-up on budding trends, emerging talents and neglected aesthetics. Instead of essays, we use brief tales to tune into the rhythm of our world. We travelled for a year without stopping, and seeing as the memory of this journey has not faded, we have chosen to edit a printed copy. We eliminated anything episodic, ephemeral or fading, maintaining a variety of articles that flow, without losing the element of surprise, the events caught taking place, and the creations having just bloomed.