fbpx
Close

L’Aviva Home reinvents tradition creating pieces that are an ode to craftsmanship – with a contemporary twist

Designed in New York City and fabricated by highly skilled artisans around the world, all L’Aviva Home pieces are handmade

Laura Aviva started her career in the editorial world, where she held the position of creative director for Travel + Leisure magazine for eight years. She then realised that she needed more creative freedom, which materialised through the launch of her own lighting and product design studio and brand. Based in New York City, L’Aviva Home comprises several collections of lamps, rugs, pillows, blankets, throws and wallpapers that are inspired by the founder’s many travels and personal background.

Atzompa collection

Raised in Los Angeles, Aviva was inevitably influenced by Mexican culture. Today, Latin America is one of the places where she finds the best craftsmen to fabricate her products. A case in point: the new Saddle lamps were made in collaboration with master craftsman Edgar Beltrán Jaramillo, who is based in Bogota, Colombia. With its production involving 15 distinct steps, this series follows the same formation techniques as those used in crafting equestrian saddles, where sheets of leather are laid over custom-formed wood moulds in a series of successive and meticulously executed steps. “The result is called, accordingly, ‘board-formed leather’,” Aviva says.

Available in three styles – Capa pendant, Doma pendant and Noma sconce – and five hues – Alemendra, Mora, Palma, Cobalto and Negro – and crafted from a saturated jewel-tone colour palette that draws on the works of Colombian artist Fernando Botero, these lamps are part of the Talabartero collection, which was initially launched with leather poufs and pillows. “We marry the distinctive style of the master artisans with our own, designing through a process of a shared vision,” Aviva explains.

Evoking the stone masks of the ancient civilisation of Teotihuacan, the Piedra lighting line in marble and onyx was created in the Mexican city of Tecali, while the Atzompa lighting collection was produced with artisan Eligio Zarate in the town of Santa María Atzompa (in the Mexican state of Oaxaca), where the pottery-making tradition dates back to the ancient Zapotec culture.

Noma sconce

“When we start to look at a new collection and we are in the beginning stages, we always have a few goals in mind that guide our design process,” says Aviva. “First and foremost, we want to create something that is beautiful, in its own right; that draws on tradition in a new light; and that feels timeless – something that you can’t quite put your finger on in terms of what period it is from. In that way, we look to breathe new and enduring life into the pieces we create.”

This approach also pervades the Jujuy rug collection made by a women’s co-operative in Argentina, the Bolivian hammocks woven in the Amazon and the Khovar fabrics and wallpapers with patterns transposed from the mud paintings of Hazaribagh in northeastern India, among others. 

“We find inspiration in the unexpected alchemy of cultures colliding,” Aviva says. “We honour the ties that bind an object to its origins, and we understand luxury as a way of deeply connecting with the people and the things that surround us.”

Doma pendent from the Talabartero collection

The Latest
22 hours ago

Read ‘Craft Meets Culture’ – Note from the editor – April 2025

This month, we celebrate the intersection of craft and culture, a theme that resonates throughout the issue.

March 28, 2025

Things to Covet- March 2025

Objects to add a unique sense of playfulness and personality to your space

March 27, 2025
TREDEX at ISH 2025

TREDEX Makes a Bold Debut at ISH 2025

A Defining Moment for Saudi Innovation

March 27, 2025

The Touch: Spaces Designed for the Senses

A journey through sensory-driven design

March 27, 2025
XYZ Design

Çamlıca House

Designed by Istanbul-based studio XYZ Design, this unique log house has been transformed into a full-time residence with soul

March 26, 2025
Melissa & Miller Philadelphia home

A Home Alive in Colour

Melissa & Miller infuse artful vibrance into a French Colonial home

March 26, 2025

Sculpting Sustainability

We take you inside a restaurant that hosts the world’s largest 3D-printed interiors

March 25, 2025

Salone del Mobile 2025

Here’s what to expect at the 63rd edition of the fair in Milan this year

March 24, 2025
Dragonfly

Step into Dragonfly at the Lana Promenade, Dorchester Collection

A hybrid of traditional Asian elements merge with hyper - modern aesthetics at Dragonfly

March 24, 2025
Salone del mobile panel identity

identity to host panel at Salone del Mobile.Milano 2025

identity will host an exclusive panel at the Porro exhibit during the 63rd edition of the international fair

March 24, 2025

A Sleek Finish

Italian craftsmanship meets contemporary sophistication in a harmonious blend of form, function and luxury