The Edit (Copy)

Explore “The Edit”, a seasonal collection of images and musings that invites you to see Egg Collective through a new lens.

 

STILL LIVES — 01/01/26

 

Explore Eden and step into a world where nature meets the sublime. Weaving together the softness of cashmere, the luster of silk, and the strength of wool we invite you into the tactile landscapes of our Eden Rug Collection. Offered in four organic shapes—circle, cloud, leaf, and rectangle—each piece evokes a quiet mysticism rooted in history and grounded in nature.

 
 
 

A Vase of Flowers, Margareta Haverman Dutch, 1716

 
 
 

 

EXPLORING EDEN — 09/01/25

 

Explore Eden and step into a world where nature meets the sublime. Weaving together the softness of cashmere, the luster of silk, and the strength of wool we invite you into the tactile landscapes of our Eden Rug Collection. Offered in four organic shapes—circle, cloud, leaf, and rectangle—each piece evokes a quiet mysticism rooted in history and grounded in nature.

Step into a world where nature meets the sublime in this exploration of our Eden Collection. Weaving together the softness of cashmere, the luster of silk, and the strength of wool we invite you into a tactile landscape. Offered in four organic shapes—circle, cloud, leaf, and rectangle—each piece evokes a quiet serenity rooted in history and grounded in nature.

 
 

Botanical Study of Indian Mulberry (Morinda citrifolia), late 18th century

 

‘The Gathering of Mulberry Leaves and the Feeding of the Silkworms’, Plate 5 from "The Introduction of the Silkworm" [Vermis Sericus], Karel van Mallery Netherlandish, ca. 1595

 
 

“Somewhere on a mulberry leaf a silkworm forms its cocoon… her essence becomes the finest, softest qualities of silk.” — Ell Benjamin

 
 

Cashmere Goats

 
 

'The silkworm of India' - Depiction of the different stages of the silkworm by Alfred Louis Sargent (1828-1855) from The Illustrated London News

 
 

Title Plate from "The Introduction of the Silkworm" [Vermis Sericus], Karel van Mallery Netherlandish

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Dusty Trail, Kaye Shimojima (Japanese, 1888 - after 1945), ca. 1921

 
 

 

KNOCK ON WOOD — 05/13/25

 

With this edit, we invite you to meditate on the deep-rooted kinship between maker and matter. Myth, memory, and meaning blend with a whimsical and woodsy interpretation of some of our classic designs. Inspired by our Spring 2025 group exhibition “Knock on Wood”, this collection invites you to see a humble, ancient medium through a reverent, modern lens.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Superstition

I have painted a picture of a ghost
Upon my kite,
And hung it on a tree.
Later, when I loose the string
And let it fly,
The people will cower
And hide their heads,
For fear of the God Swimming in the clouds.

— Amy Lowell

 
 

The Edge of the Woods, Narcisse-Virgile Diaz de la Peña French, 1872

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

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