If there is one lesson that has been clear to everyone in recent months, it is that the beauty does not stop. On the contrary, it finds precisely in the difficulties new inspiration and new lifeblood.
And so it is that the ideas of designers and brands, which had come to an abrupt halt with the health emergency in March, flourish again. And they do so with a renewed energy, with a bursting vitality, with a resilience that has perhaps always been the real key to progress.
Not only have design events been able to reinvent themselves and come up with a more innovative version, exploiting the digital channels of theinformation technologybut the projects themselves smell of the future.
A future that is at once functionality, versatility, well-being, a future that is reclaiming one's own space and time, a time that is here and now, in its impalpable and essential importance, in its fleeting, ephemeral essence, yet extremely eternal in the moment. The furnishings are transformed to enlarge, multiply, compose and conceal spaces, achieving maximum comfortstyles and languages mix and integrate, the playful aspect becomes an important thread, capable of telling new stories that have within them a desire for rebirth and positivity.
The backdrop is the rediscovered and renewed focus on the nautical sector, with its extraordinary style proposals and trends that wink at comfort and relaxation that take on even greater importance in the age of post Covid. The atmospheres on board the yachts change and adapt to an elegant and metropolitan contemporary imagery, materials become green, shapes and lines minimal, light becomes the protagonist of spaces, colours create magical atmospheres.
The desire for a new start is embodied in a renewed spirit of vitality, made even more evident by the attention given to outdoor projects, which are increasingly refined, elegant, and able to translate the desire for well-being and the desire to inhabit open spaces.
This new concept of Design, born in the aftermath of the health emergency experienced, is fully explored in the interview with Mirco Crosattowhere it states "Covid-19 has forced us into social distancing and this has made us change habits we were strongly attached to, such as handshakes and hugs between friends. Spaces and objects will also have to take these new rules into account: the former by creating places where people can gather safely; this will be possible thanks to new technologies in the area of sanctification and in the subdivision of environments, which must nevertheless remain welcoming at the same time'.
One returns to life, therefore, if not yet in a totally carefree manner, certainly with a more conscious attitude.
































