Anyone who knows Wearstler’s signature style knows that it is anything but beige and boring—she revels in colour, specialises in mood-lifting spaces, and is the creative genius behind playful designs like a $2,800 bum-shaped Butt stool and the shiny disco ball Paris Drinks table that she made for Rotganzen. Bold and bespoke, her designs belong to the school of peak personality decor that embraced maximalism even in the quiet luxury era. A critic once compared a Wearstler room to that of an overstimulated child. Which is to say, we were expecting some of that playful energy, whimsical designs, and Hollywood-style sheen with her first almost-affordable collection that democratises design.
And she delivered. The palette may be muted, but there is Tetris-like seating, a trompe l’oeil vase, a chair that can turn into a sofa, a table that can be arranged to suit the size of your entertaining spread, and even a clothes rack that seems inspired from her latest trip to Jaipur. At Palazzo Acerbi, a venue that has been closed to the public for years, all this unfolded in a series of immersive rooms where these pieces changed and interacted with the different spaces.
Below, Hollywood’s favourite maximalist talks about her Milan debut, her macchiato order, and what’s common between homes from Milan to Mumbai:
This may be your first time showcasing at MDW but not in the city. What’s the first thing you do in Milan?
Milan is a city of momentum. It’s about business, energy, and ideas, so I want to arrive feeling clear and focused. It’s a long journey from Los Angeles, so I always begin by resetting my body. Movement is essential. I’ll go to Barry’s Milano or the fitness centre at my hotel to help me recalibrate and come back to myself. Then it’s a triple macchiato, taken standing at the bar like the Milanese: quick, precise, and part of the rhythm of the city. From there, I move straight into meetings while absorbing as much of the culture and atmosphere as I can.
Is this the same work routine you followed while designing this collection for H&M Home?
Routine is essential to how I move through the day. I begin the same way each morning: a triple macchiato, a workout, and time with my son Crosby, getting him ready for the day. From there, everything shifts: site visits, meetings, sourcing, constant movement. But I always return to that midday reset—a workout I think of as my “afternoon delight”. It’s a moment to recalibrate, to come back into focus. Over time, these routines become rituals. This collection is about elevating the objects that live within those moments, the pieces that support the most personal, intimate rhythms of daily life.