Design30 Mar 20263 MIN

Why your home might need a few bugs right now

Better than the real thing, at least these insect-inspired decor pieces don’t bite

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Instagram/@obeetee

Somewhere between couture and curiosity, bugs have got a full image overhaul. No longer the kind you nervously brush off your arm, they are now showing up embroidered, sculpted, and, increasingly, styled. At the recently concluded Lakmé Fashion Week, Rahul Mishra sent out a surreal set dotted with larger-than-life dragonflies and ladybugs. Showstopper Ananya Panday’s look featured delicate dragonfly detailing that leaned more fairytale than creepy-crawly.

Jewellery has been in on this for a while. Designers like Bhavya Ramesh have turned beetles, butterflies, and other tiny creatures into pieces you’d actually want to wear, blurring the line between ornament and oddity. But it’s not stopping at fashion. Because if bugs are showing up on runways, it is only a matter of time before they made their way into homes.

Earlier this year, writer and fashion consultant Varun Rana designed his first collection with Obeetee, titled ‘Insectif’, which brought insect motifs onto carpets in a way that felt both unexpected and oddly natural. The starting point, as he recalls, was a quiet morning in Mirzapur: “I was sipping my morning tea on the veranda, when a beautiful insect landed on the rug below my feet and started walking around. It appeared like a jewel on the carpet, and I remember thinking that if someone could make a carpet with this design, it would be insane,” recalls the Delhi-based creative, who has designed 10 playful pieces, someone of which remind of us of vintage video games. 

What makes insects so compelling, Rana adds, is how easily we overlook them. “Insects don’t really fly in our vision; they stay hidden in the grass or bushes or under a log somewhere. But when you really look at them, they’re insanely gorgeous.”

And that shift in perspective is exactly what’s playing out across design right now. Bugs are no longer something to avoid but something to notice, collect, and even style. Whether it’s a statement carpet, a sculptural lamp, or smaller accents that quietly bring in the motif, there are plenty of ways to let them in without going overboard. Consider these eight pieces your starting point.

01

Bumblebee glass and metal table lamp, Anthropologie, ₹13,935

A softly glowing honeycomb form with tiny bumblebees resting at the base, it leans decorative without feeling overdone. It’s pretty, a little whimsical, and just the kind of thing that makes a side table feel less boring.

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02

Vitrine rosa hand-tufted woollen and viscose rug, Varun Rana x Obeetee, ₹74,000

From Varun Rana’s ‘Insectif’ series with Obeetee, this one plays with lively insect motifs that seem to crawl across the surface. Honestly, the one time you won’t mind bugs underfoot or making their way onto your walls.

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03

Dragonfly accent piece, Nicobar, ₹1,650

A simple, well-finished dragonfly form that works as a small decor object without feeling too theme-y, this is the kind of thing you place on a stack of books or a console and forget about until someone picks it up mid-conversation,

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04

Ant light, Shailesh Rajput Studio, price on request

A single oversized ant holds up the light source here, which makes the whole piece feel slightly surreal but still very clean.

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05

The Dweller table lamp by Fenna Kosfeld, price on request

This one leans abstract, with a form that feels slightly alien or insect-like without being literal. It has a soft sci-fi edge to it, like something you’d spot in a very well-designed futuristic set.

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06

Beetle charm aluminium accent bowl, ₹3,710

Shaped like a beetle itself, this one leans fully into the theme without feeling too much. It works just as well holding your everyday bits as it does just sitting pretty.

 

 

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07

Bugs plate, Rooshad Shroff, price on request

These plates from Rooshad Shroff’s studio feature finely inlaid beetle details across white marble, turning a simple surface into something quietly playful and a little unexpected.

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