試す 金 - 無料
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
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.”
このストーリーは、Architectural Digest US の December 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Architectural Digest US からのその他のストーリー
Architectural Digest US
Rocky Mountain High
Designer Frances Merrill of Reath Design channels the spirit of the landscape in her soulful transformation of an Aspen ski house
3 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
LINES in the SAND
DESIGNED BY FOSTER + PARTNERS, THE NEW ZAYED NATIONAL MUSEUM IN ABU DHABI MARRIES VERNACULAR TRADITIONS WITH CUTTING-EDGE RESPONSES TO EXTREMIE CLIMATE NEEDS
3 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
POWER PLAY
Architect Frank Gehry conjures an astonishing, sculptural home in Silicon Valley with discreetly deferential interiors by The Wiseman Group
5 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
SLOW BURN
WITH HELP FROM DESIGNER REMY RENZULLO, JESSICA SAILER TAKES THE PATIENT, EVOLUTIONARY APPROACH TO OUTFITTING A BROOKLYN TOWN HOUSE FOR HER FAMILY
4 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
FOREVER YOUNG
YOUNG HUH’S ROMANTIC HUDSON VALLEY FARMHOUSE IS A DREAMY BLEND OF COTTAGE STYLE, KOREAN HERITAGE, AND STIRRING REINVENTION
4 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
Lights Fantastic
Lighting sculptor Stephen White constructed more than 2,000 works over his six-decade career, at least one a staggering 18 feet tall, yet his meticulous scrapbooks contain scant evidence of public recognition. A few newspaper clippings from Hawaii and the West Coast sit next to a single national magazine cover, nearly half a century old the logo obscuring White's (uncredited) design
3 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
PARADISE FOUND
AT NORTHERN CALIFORNIA'S ICONIC SEA RANCH, HARD BY THE PACIFIC, COMMUNE DESIGN HELPS A YOUNG CREATIVE COUPLE MANIFEST THEIR DREAM OF COASTAL BLISS
4 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
FERTILE IMAGINATION
DESIGNING A ROOFTOP GARDEN FOR THE STUDIO MUSEUM IN HARLEM, SARA ZEWDE TAKES INSPIRATION FROM THE NEIGHBORHOOD AS A PLACE AND AS AN IDEA
3 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
CUTTING A RUG
Even during Sweden's famously long and bitter-cold winter, the dining room at Beata Heuman’s 18th-century family farmhouse bursts with life thanks to the hand-painted mural of tulips, lilies, dahlias, and fruit trees—all a nod to flora on the property grounds, much of it planted by her mom. Now, the AD100 designer has teamed up with the British wall covering brand de Gournay to bring that tableau (ever so slightly tweaked) into production. Heuman says of the collaboration, which also includes Delft Folly, her riff on the classic Dutch blue-and-white tiles. degournay.com
1 min
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
Passing the Torch
At Milan's new Olympic Village, architects Skidmore, Owings & Merrill envision community well beyond the Games
1 mins
January / February 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
