Fromental and Harris Reed Take Maximalist Interiors to the Runway – and Back Home Again – With a New Haute Collaboration

Prowling tiger stripes, trailing botanicals, and plenty of demi-couture drama define Fromental and Harris Reed’s wallpaper-and-furnishings crossover

Side-by-side of Harris Reed's personal London bedroom, which features blue and pink wallpaper alongside coordinating bed linens and a whimsical floral chandelier
(Image credit: Fromental / Vogue Runway)

Harris Reed’s SS26 runway show in September featured fourteen looks cut entirely from Fromental silks and velvets, transforming the wallcovering house's couture-grade interior textiles into a sartorial spectacle of tiger-print skirts and brocade corsets that pushed the designer's already theatrical maximalism further still. Now, the collaboration moves in the other direction – or, one could argue, back in the same.

Harris and Fromental have, for the first time, translated that same flamboyant energy into hand-painted and hand-embroidered wallcoverings, alongside cushions, bolsters, and throws that carry the runway’s avant-garde spirit back into the home.

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Side-by-side of model debuting a tiger-print gown inside of an opulent London bar and an equally opulent living room interior, echoing the same stripes

Ambiguous Tiger’ made its salon-style runway debut as a bubbled fishtail skirt (Look 12) at the St. Pancras Renaissance Hotel’s Gothic Bar during Harris Reed’s SS26 show in September 2025. Now, the same wild motif moves indoors, scaled up and softened in Nuanced Copper.

(Image credit: Getty Images (David Benett) / Fromental)

Take, Wilde Dreams, which first appeared as a one-off in Harris's bedroom before debuting on the runway in Look 11: an unexpected 'mélange' – Harris's favorite and completely befitting French word – of pink-crimson florals set against kingfisher-blue moiré silk. The 'Multifarious' demi-couture might grace a gala or a fru-fru fête for a single evening. Now, released as wallpaper, the same whimsical drama can linger far longer, wrapping the walls of a dressing room day after day.

Or take a seat on a sofa instead. Ambiguous Tiger, seen in Looks 3, 4, and 12, translates just as easily into soft furnishings like bolster pillows, striking a wild note in otherwise restrained spaces – a sitting room, perhaps, or even a home office – where, as in fashion, the pattern becomes something to interact with, to inhabit.

Side-by-side of an interior accented with crawling grape vine wallpaper and a runway gown echoing the same motifs

Whispering Wisteria’ in Gilded Chartreuse finds its sartorial soulmate in Look 8: a whimsical trail of indigo blooms across a burnished gold ground, reminiscent of a Japanese woodblock in high summer.

(Image credit: Getty Images (David Benett) / Fromental)

That seesaw between within and without, expression and restraint, was central to the collaboration from the start. Fashion, after all, is a public performance, while interiors remain a private one. The heart of Harris’s universe beats in that push and pull: the same look might pair a cage-like crinoline with a cloud of unruly tulle.

In this interiors collection, that catwalk drama continues. 'Some [designs] are printed and glazed, and some are gilded with faux gold leaf. I love that they sit beautifully together. I have them both in the same room in my home – the juxtaposition heightens the sense of fabulousness,' muses Harris.

Side-by-side of a model wearing a blue-and-brown floral jacquard mermaid-tail strapless gown and an opulent interior corner that features those same colors and motifs in wallpaper

Wilde Dreams’ goes noir in this cocoa-and-blue-violet take on the eye-popping florals, set against moiré silk that looks just as opulent in this living-room vignette as it did backstage in Look 2.

(Image credit: Jason Lloyd Evans @jasonlloydevans / Fromental)

While this marks Harris’s first official step into interiors, it’s unlikely to be his last.

'I saw the power and creative impact of wallpaper,' he explains, noting that – much like the 'it' factor of a great accessory – 'bold expression doesn’t demand a sprawling property. It can live on an accent wall, or in a powder room you never want to leave.' 'Interior decoration is the scaffolding of self-expression,' agrees Fromental co-founder Tim Butcher.

The runway may have heightened this fantasy – but this time, the walls are where it gets to stay.


Once dressing the dramatic London home of the designer, and later debuting as demi-couture on the runway, Fromental x Harris Reed finally returns home – this time, to one of your own.


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Julia Demer
Style Editor

Julia Demer is a New York–based Style Editor at Homes & Gardens with a sharp eye for where fashion meets interiors. Having cut her teeth at L’Officiel USA and The Row before pivoting into homes, she believes great style is universal – whether it’s a perfect outfit, a stunning room, or the ultimate set of sheets. Passionate about art, travel, and pop culture, Julia brings a global, insider perspective to every story.