Collections

Edits with an inner life.

Collections are Sonnetta's clearest point of view: not categories, not trend boards, but small editorial worlds with a reason to exist.

Coffee, linen, and a quiet chair in softened morning light

Current edits

Curated by feeling, not algorithm.

Each collection starts as an atmosphere, then becomes a disciplined set of materials, products, and omissions.

Warm wood counter stools tucked under a simple kitchen bar

KitchenCounter Stool Edit

Seats that make the island feel less like a counter.

A kitchen edit for the small domestic rituals that gather at the island: coffee, homework, a late plate, a pear cut with a pocket knife.

Feeling
Useful warmth
Why it exists
Most stools make kitchens feel more commercial. This edit restores touch, curve, and daily ease.
Signature products
Oak counter stool, woven seat, linen pendant, stone tray
Material palette
Oak, rush, pale stone, warm white, muted brass
Room atmosphere
Morning light, cleared surfaces, one bowl of fruit
Start with the oak stool
Coffee and linen beside a softened chair

LivingSunday Room

Coffee gone lukewarm, books left open.

A living room edit for low voices, long pauses, and the kind of furniture that can sit quietly with real life.

Feeling
Ease without looseness
Why it exists
A room can be calm without becoming anonymous; this edit protects warmth and negative space at once.
Signature products
Deep sofa, ribbed wool rug, low oak table, ceramic lamp
Material palette
Linen, oak, charcoal, wool, stone
Room atmosphere
Soft morning, open pages, generous seating
View room guide
Linen curtains moving in morning light

InvestmentWorth the Splurge

Pieces that alter the room's composure.

The table, chair, rug, or light that makes every simpler decision around it look more intentional.

Feeling
Quiet conviction
Why it exists
Some rooms do not need more pieces. They need one piece with better proportion, material, or shadow.
Signature products
Sculptural chair, handmade rug, stone lamp, solid wood table
Material palette
Undyed wool, aged oak, linen, limestone
Room atmosphere
Restraint with one unforgettable line
Shop investment pieces
Stone bowl with pears on quiet linen

EducationMaterial Spotlight

The materials that make a room remember.

Wool, oak, linen, stone, and brass as a practical language for rooms that become more beautiful with use.

Feeling
Tactile permanence
Why it exists
Trend language fails quickly. Material intelligence keeps decisions clear.
Signature products
Wool rug, oak stool, linen bedding, stone vessel, brass lamp
Material palette
Stone, wool, oak, linen, unlacquered brass
Room atmosphere
Texture before styling, patina before shine
Read material essay
Quiet still life of stoneware and natural texture

WeeklyFive Things I'd Buy

Five decisions that make the room exhale.

A concise weekly edit: one light, one texture, one useful piece, one object with hand, and one risk worth taking.

Feeling
Small but decisive
Why it exists
The best rooms often change through modest, exact moves rather than full makeovers.
Signature products
Linen shade, ceramic vessel, oak bowl, wool throw, brass taper holder
Material palette
Warm white, hand-thrown ceramic, oak, muted brass
Room atmosphere
A shelf edited down until every object has air
Get the next edit
Morning sunlight across oak floors, linen curtains, coffee, pears, and an open book

StyleTimeless Living

The Sonnetta house style.

Warm whites, natural oak, softened linen, stone, brass, organic curves, and rooms that keep their emotion after the trend has moved on.

Feeling
Editorial romanticism
Why it exists
Sonnetta needed language for taste that is warmer than minimalism and more disciplined than decoration.
Signature products
Oak table, linen sofa, stone bowl, wool rug, aged metal detail
Material palette
Warm white, stone, oak, linen, charcoal, muted brass
Room atmosphere
Seasonal light, imperfect styling, evidence of use
Read the point of view