In the Ricamo design, the echo of artisanal knowledge becomes a contemporary drawing.
This wallpaper is a graphic reinterpretation of the Trappigna technique, a decorative craft that once merged pattern and background into a single visual gesture, often used for bridal blankets, ceremonial tapestries, and ritual fabrics.
Here, memory unfolds within a repeated grid — symbols, eyes, flames, arabesques — all aligned in an order that vibrates rather than rests.
The result is a geometric pattern that recalls a woven tapestry, yet with lightness and balance.
Every line is a visual stitch, every form a symbolic thread.
This essential variant carries a sense of suspended, understated elegance.
The background is a very light grey with a subtle hint of blue, as if the dust of an ancient fabric had settled on a modern surface.
The design is rendered in fine, delicate white linework, almost carved in light.
A composition that forgoes contrast in favor of visual transparency: the pattern is felt more than seen, revealing itself to those who look closely — like a precious embroidery sewn onto antique linen.
It is the ideal version for interiors with a minimal yet narrative soul: a visual boiserie for bedrooms, studios, or boutiques, where decoration becomes an intimate, silent gesture.