SOFT EARTH — Spring 2026
Julie Nightstand (center) collaged with vintage Morning Glory photographs
The Spring Equinox arrives each year on March 20th, ushering in a rare moment of equilibrium between day and night. This perfect balancing of the scales also signals change — a tipping towards the warmth and softening of Spring.
After the stillness of winter, the ground slowly thaws, light lingers a little longer, and the first signs of life press upward through the soil. This seasonal shift has long been a symbol of renewal: a reminder that creativity, like the natural world, moves in cycles of rest, emergence, and growth. It is in this spirit that Soft Earth unfolds…
On view at Egg Collective’s Tribeca Gallery, Soft Earth is a temporary shoppable installation featuring florals, fashion, and furniture from three female-led brands rooted in craft: Egg Collective, Thank You Have a Good Day and Fox Fodder Flowers
Opening Weekend
Saturday, March 21st & Sunday, March 22nd
from 11-5
151 Hudson Street
On view through April 24th, 2026
Fox Fodder Flower Arrangement (center) with vintage Iris photographs
Rooted in Tribeca and guided by three female-led studios devoted to craft, Soft Earth celebrates the power of creative alignment. Each brand brings its own language of design, yet together they form a shared landscape—one where furniture, flowers, and garments emerge as part of the same living environment.
Reflecting the subtle beauty of the season’s awakening, within the gallery petals unfurl beside sculptural forms, textiles echo the softness of newly warmed earth, and natural materials carry the memory of the landscapes from which they came. The installation invites visitors to move through these layers slowly, discovering how objects can hold both delicacy and strength, much like the first blooms of spring.
Thank You Have a Good Day Skirt and Cropped Tank (center) with vintage Cherry Blossom photographs
Like the equinox itself, the collaboration is about balance: between nature and design, structure and softness, individuality and community. In this moment of seasonal renewal, the installation is both a celebration of new work and a gesture toward the possibilities that grow when creative voices gather and bloom together.
Phillips Nightstand (center) collaged with vintage Peony photographs
A Light exists in Spring
A Light exists in Spring
Not present on the Year
At any other period -
When March is scarcely here
A Color stands abroad
On Solitary Fields
That Science cannot overtake
But Human Nature feels.
It waits upon the Lawn,
It shows the furthest Tree
Upon the furthest Slope you know
It almost speaks to you.
Then as Horizons step
Or Noons report away
Without the Formula of sound
It passes and we stay --
A quality of loss
Affecting our Content
As Trade had suddenly encroached
Upon a Sacrament
— Emily Dickinson