City Living

The Colorful, Eclectic Apartment of an Italian Textile Designer

Ida Corti, textile designer and creative director of the iconic textile brand Lisa Corti, welcomes us inside her luminous Milan home—a former abandoned glass factory transformed over decades into a vibrant, deeply personal family home.


What began as a vast industrial shell has evolved slowly and instinctively, shaped by family life, travel, and an ever-growing collection of meaningful objects. Flooded with natural light and softened by layers of color, the home balances openness with warmth. An airy open plan is grounded by richly patterned textiles, hand-painted details, and an abundance of plants that give the space its unmistakable sense of ease.


Ida’s approach to decorating is deeply intuitive. Antique porcelain collected by her father, artworks by friends and family, and pieces gathered across India, Africa, and Europe sit effortlessly alongside her own designs for Lisa Corti. From a hand-painted cupboard inspired by Lisbon tiles to boldly painted floors, every corner reflects her love of craftsmanship, color, and lived-in beauty.


At its heart, the home is always evolving—something Ida describes as a collaboration between herself and the house itself. It is a place of creativity, hospitality, and retreat, where rooms are made for gathering, daily rituals, and the quiet accumulation of memories.


Layered, expressive, and full of character, Ida’s Milan home is a lesson in building a space slowly—guided by instinct, shaped by time, and filled with things that matter.