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Edit Napoli 2025 | Emerging Makers at La Santissima You Shouldn’t Miss

Edit Napoli 2025 | Emerging Makers at La Santissima You Shouldn’t Miss

La Santissima Community Hub, Napoli

Waiting for Edit Napoli 2025

As the design world sets its eyes on Naples, Edit Napoli 2025 emerges once again as a key platform connecting artisans, emerging makers, and design lovers alike. One of its most anticipated venues is La Santissima Community Hub, a historic location transformed into a creative hub, where many young talents will present their latest work. In this article, we spotlight a few standout names — Cuore Carpenito, Abacus Atelier, Enrico Girotti, and People of The Sun — and explore how their distinctive aesthetics are contributing to fresh dialogues in design.

The Role of Edit Napoli 2025 & La Santissima in Cultivating Talent

Edit Napoli (or simply Edit) is Italy’s itinerant design fair, rotating through various southern cities to bring together designers, makers, galleries, and curators. It offers a fertile ground for emerging creatives to show alongside established names. In 2025, the show returns to Naples with La Santissima as one of its anchor venues—an evocative, often reimagined historic space that lends its patina and energy to the works shown inside.

La Santissima becomes more than a backdrop: it becomes part of the exhibition experience. There is an interplay of rough textures, stone walls, light, and atmosphere. All these amplifies the narratives of makers whose work is grounded in artisanary, material exploration, and poetic storytelling. In 2025, some of the most exciting new voices at La Santissima include Cuore Carpenito, Abacus Atelier, Enrico Girotti, and People of The Sun. Let’s look closer at each.

Cuore Carpenito at Edit 2025: Heartfelt Craft in Textile & Materials

Cuore Carpenito is a relatively young brand whose name already conveys emotion and intention: “cuore,” meaning heart, and “Carpenito,” a nod (perhaps) to lineage or place. The work is often textile-driven, combining natural fabrics, subtle dyeing techniques, and artisan stitching. You can expect pieces that feel handmade yet mature — where irregularities and textures speak louder than polish.

At La Santissima, Cuore Carpenito is likely to present collections where color modulation, slow processes (like hand-dyeing or vegetal tints), and sensorial tactility take center stage. Their philosophy is rooted in a quiet resistance to mass uniformity, inviting viewers to touch, observe nuance, and feel a connection.

 

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Un post condiviso da Cuorecarpenito (@cuorecarpenito)

Abacus Atelier at Edit 2025: Geometry, Materiality & Unexpected Assemblage

Abacus Atelier is the kind of studio that catches your eye with clean lines and then pulls you in with material surprises. The name hints at counting, structure, measuring — a methodical approach. However, their work often reveals delightful deviations: subtle curves, unexpected joints, and cross-disciplinary mixings of materials (wood, metal, ceramics, and even light elements).

In the context of Edit 2025, Abacus Atelier might present furniture, lighting, or decorative objects that balance precision with humility — objects that respect geometry without becoming cold, that invite use rather than pedestal appreciation. Their design language often conveys that disciplinary border-crossing (architecture meets sculpture meets everyday object) is not just possible but generative.

 

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Un post condiviso da ABACUS ATELIER (@abacus_atelier)

Enrico Girotti at Edit 2025: Poetic Lines & Contextual References

Enrico Girotti, with La Piega, is another emerging designer whose work frequently explores the intersection of place, memory, and form. His style tends toward clean silhouettes, contemplative gestures, and a dialogue between tradition and minimalism. You may find pieces where a chair, table, or object evokes regional vernacular but conveys into pure, modern lines.

At La Santissima, Girotti might showcase prototypes or limited-edition pieces that explore this tension between rootedness and restraint: a table with legs reminiscent of old farm tools, or a stool with negative spaces that resonate with architectural openings. His work invites contextual reading: what does it owe to local craft, what does it propose as something new?

 

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Un post condiviso da enrico girotti (@enrico.girotti)

People of The Sun at Edit 2025: Narrative, Community, & Cultural Resonance

People of the Sun brings a more narrative-driven, culturally attuned perspective. Their work is infused with storytelling, symbolism, and references to identity, perhaps drawing from history, solar metaphors, or communal practices. Rather than pure form for form’s sake, they may use objects as carriers of a message or experience.

At Edit Napoli, their presentation at La Santissima may combine installations, sculptures, textiles, and multimedia. Their aim is to express themes of belonging, hope, or myth. They excel in blending aesthetics with concept, creating objects that not only function but also speak, evoke, and provoke.

Why These Names Matter for Edit 2025

These four makers embody a vital balance in design: respect for craft and speculative thinking. They are not nostalgic pastiche-makers, but aware of material histories and social narratives. In the resonant space of La Santissima, their work shines with a dialogue between old walls and fresh ideas.

Edit Napoli 2025, through venues like La Santissima, becomes more than just a trade show. It becomes a laboratory for emerging voices. Keep an eye on these names; they are part of the next wave of Italian and Mediterranean design.

Stay tuned to dig deeper into Edit Napoli 2025 with us!

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