Inspired by Claude Monet and the Impressionist movement—named for the garden where light became legend—Giverny honors the poetry of perception.

Rooted in the tradition of plein air painting, Impressionism sought to capture atmosphere, movement, and emotion through visible brushwork and layered color rather than literal form. Through modern craftsmanship and mindful materials, the Giverny Collection translates these principles into surface and texture—where color, tactility, and material depth work together to express light in motion.

Each textile reflects nature as Monet experienced it—ever shifting with time of day and season—through softened edges, layered hues, and a restrained, painterly palette anchored in greens, blues, and lived‑in neutrals drawn directly from Monet’s gardens, skies, and waterlily ponds.

Explore each pattern to understand its role within the palette—and sample to experience the texture, color interplay, and material nuance firsthand.

Monet

Named for the artist at the heart of Impressionism, Monet represents the ground from which the collection emerges. Layered fields of color and rhythmic, brush-like transitions echo the painter’s outdoor studies, where light shaped form and atmosphere over time. As a foundational texture, Monet anchors Giverny’s palette


Ciel

Ciel translates atmosphere into textile form, allowing light blues, softened neutrals, and gentle transitions to bring a sense of calm and openness to interior spaces.


Nymphea

Named for Monet’s Nymphéas—a study of rippled reflection and scattered light. With its canvas-like weave and refined tactility, Nymphea becomes a woven meditation on perception, renewal, and the poetry of observation, mirroring the interplay of water, shadow, and bloom.


Toile

An innovative fusion of woven and nonwoven materials, inspired by the painter’s canvas. A meditation on restraint and material honesty, Toile celebrates the foundation that gives artistry its ground.


Brume

Brume draws from the soft haze of early mornings at Giverny, where mist dissolves edges into atmosphere. Bouclé textures build a quiet dimensionality, evoking Monet’s fascination with texture—a tactile reverie shaped by nature’s most ephemeral moment.


Aube

Aube captures the essence of first light, when color begins to emerge from shadow. Smooth and matte, it feels elemental and pure—an open canvas that grounds the Giverny collection and invites composition within a space.