कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त

HUNTING & GATHERING

December 2025

|

Architectural Digest US

In the Missoni clan's longtime Alpine retreat, family matriarch Rosita's love of foraged mushrooms, folksy flea market finds, and, of course, bold colors and patterns lives on

- LAURA MAY TODD

HUNTING & GATHERING

Mushrooms never grow in isolation—to see one is to assume a vast network of mycelium sprouting unseen nearby. In the holiday apartment of Rosita Missoni, the late founder of the fashion brand Missoni, in Crans-Montana, Switzerland, such fungal figures abound. The motifs appear everywhere: rows of toadstools atop the fireplace's stone mantel; scientific illustrations mounted in thin wood frames on the walls; a set of upholstered ottomans in the shape of spotted, red-capped fly agarics—psychedelic perches fit for Alice's Wonderland.

Rosita and her husband, Ottavio, along with other members of the Missoni clan, began visiting this mountainous region of southern Switzerland in the 1960s. “My grandparents started to come, and then my aunties and cousins. At the end, everybody bought a house,” recalls her daughter Angela Missoni, creative director of Missoni from 1997 to 2021.

Here in the heart of the Alps, Rosita, who passed away in January, fully indulged her passion for mushrooms and foraging. On late summer mornings—dressed in her mountain uniform, a Banana Republic safari vest layered over an old favorite shirt with a kerchief knotted neatly at her neck—she would wake early to climb the steep mountain slopes in search of her prize: fat, umbrella-shaped porcini and feather-like golden chanterelles. “She even had a specific retractable knife with a brush to clean them,” remembers her granddaughter Margherita Maccapani Missoni, the creative director of fashion brand Maccapani. “So the spores would fall on the forest floor and new mushrooms would grow.”

Architectural Digest US से और कहानियाँ

Architectural Digest US

Architectural Digest US

GRAND ILLUSTRATIONS

Architect Luca Bombassei has created a synthesis between ancient and modern, art and life, on a piano nobile of a palazzo on Venice's Grand Canal

time to read

3 mins

December 2025

Architectural Digest US

Architectural Digest US

WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE

Working with landscape designer Dennis Schrader, artist Ugo Rondinone crafts a meditative Long Island garden where bold sculptures mingle with moss

time to read

2 mins

December 2025

Architectural Digest US

Architectural Digest US

EVERYTHING IS ILLUMINATED

FROM HIS NEW STUDIO IN BROOKLYN, ARTIST JAMES CHERRY IS HONING HIS MATERIAL LANGUAGE TO SCALE UP HIS HANDMADE LOW-FI LIGHTS—ONE COMMISSION AT A TIME

time to read

2 mins

December 2025

Architectural Digest US

ART APPRECIATION

For collectors Jen Rubio and Stewart Butterfield, a historic Hamptons house with interiors by Jake Arnold is the perfect canvas

time to read

3 mins

December 2025

Architectural Digest US

COLLECTIVE VISION

With help from designer Fernando Santangelo, filmmaker Fabiola Beracasa Beckman fashions a family-friendly showcase for a lifetime's worth of art and objects in her Greenwich Village town house

time to read

3 mins

December 2025

Architectural Digest US

Architectural Digest US

Symbolic Power

Blending traditions in furnishings of uncommon beauty, Mehdi Dakhli unpacks complex cultural narratives

time to read

1 mins

December 2025

Architectural Digest US

Architectural Digest US

HUNTING & GATHERING

In the Missoni clan's longtime Alpine retreat, family matriarch Rosita's love of foraged mushrooms, folksy flea market finds, and, of course, bold colors and patterns lives on

time to read

3 mins

December 2025

Architectural Digest US

Architectural Digest US

Breathing Exercise

Updating a historic New York town house, Andre Mellone and Jean-Gabriel Neukomm give the art ample air to shine

time to read

3 mins

December 2025

Architectural Digest US

Architectural Digest US

THEN MEETS NOW

Rescued by a group of artists and restored with the National Trust for Historic Preservation, Nina Simone's childhood home reemerges as a beacon of Black cultural memory

time to read

3 mins

December 2025

Architectural Digest US

Architectural Digest US

Desk Jockey

Maurice Calka's sculptural 1969 worktable feels as futuristic now as it did then

time to read

1 mins

December 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size