Teulat: decoration that transmits calm, light and Valencian design.

In a market where trends change every five minutes, Teulat opts for the opposite: furniture that is born slowly, that connects with everyday life and that integrates into homes without asking permission. They do not come to impose style, but to accompany it. And this is perhaps its greatest virtue.

Teulat: decoration that transmits calm, light and Valencian design | Monapart

Teulat is much more than a firm of furnitureis the second generation of a Valencian family business that has managed to place itself on the radar of designers, architects and interior designers from all over the world.

The design that doesn't make noise (but stays)

Teulat's pieces have something that is not always found in contemporary furniture: a silent presence. Clean lines, sober colours and details that do not seek to attract attention, but hold the eye. They are pieces of furniture designed for real homes, where plants, toys, half-read books and a cat that always climbs up where it shouldn't, coexist.

The interesting thing is this versatility: a Teulat table works just as well in a Nordic living room as it does in a flat with Mediterranean flair. A sideboard can coexist with contemporary art or traditional ceramics. This ability to adapt is, in decoration, gold.

Teulat: decoration that transmits calm, light and Valencian design | Monapart
ARISTA wooden coffee table

A process that starts in the street (not on Pinterest)

Teulat's design is born from everyday life: a shady street, a tiled façade, the reflection of the sun on the table of a neighbourhood café. Simple inspirations, almost invisible, but profoundly real. And that look, so little digital, is recognisable in his pieces: furniture that does not need to be presented, that seems to have always been there, integrating into any space with the naturalness of what is well made.

Teulat: decoration that transmits calm, light and Valencian design | Monapart
Teulat Bajoqueta

The colour palette also speaks of this restraint: neutral tones, warm earths, shades that accompany the light in the house... These are colours that work well in living rooms, bedrooms or open spaces where the decoration needs balance and not stridency.

From sketch to someone's living room

Teulat's designers are thrilled to discover their pieces in shops, in real houses or even in television series. There is something special about seeing how an object that began as a sketch or a rendering ends up becoming part of other people's daily lives, integrating itself into their routines, their gestures and their memories.

This emotional bond is perceived in every detail. Its collections combine contemporary lines, meticulous finishes and a recognisable but versatile aesthetic. They are furniture with character, but without pretension; objects that coexist with other styles, materials and periods, and that, in the end, stay.

Teulat: decoration that transmits calm, light and Valencian design | Monapart
Teulat Mogi Armchair

When the house is a mirror...

At the head of Teulat is Eric Cambres, trained in industrial design in Valencia and later specialising in graphic and editorial design in Barcelona. After a period in London working in strategic marketing for international brands, he returned to his homeland to join the family business and, from there, to promote his own brand within the group.

And it is no coincidence that Eric lives in a space that faithfully reflects his creative universe. “My house completely reflects my personality. I love to decorate and design every corner”. The scent wafting through the air is not just any old thing: it smells of basil and mandarin, thanks to the candles created by Teulat Editions.

Their fetish objects: ceramics and works of art by emerging artists. They don't have a pet, although they say: “We'd love to, but we're a bit obsessed with cleanliness...”. Another statement of the combination of aesthetics and order that characterises their way of living. Their favourite corner: Hem's Puffy armchair, a perfect place for their morning coffee:

Design with intention (and meaning)

Beyond the formal aspect, what distinguishes the Teulat is its honesty. There are no grand speeches, no inflated slogans. There is a clear desire to do things well, to provide beauty and utility, to create objects that accompany. Teulat does not design to appear in museums, but to form part of real homes. And in this gesture there is a design ethic that is appreciated.

Because in the end, designing is also a way of caring. And that, Teulat He knows how to do it very well.

Written by Claudia Romero
Journalist and Marketing Assistant.
claudia.romero@monapart.com
View all articles by Claudia Romero
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