News & Insights

The Definitive Collection: One Curated Color Story

Written by Duvaltex | Jul 02, 2026

78 colorways. Six styles. Designed to work together from the start. 

Color in a specification context is rarely just about aesthetics. It has to coordinate across styles, hold up under different lighting conditions, and make sense across an entire project,  often without the luxury of seeing everything together before a decision is made.

That's what makes the color story behind the Definitive Collection worth a closer look.

Designed together, not side by side

The 78 colorways in the Definitive Collection weren't developed independently for each style. They were curated as a single palette, across six very different fabrics, constructions, and textures, so that combinations work without having to be figured out. Whether a project calls for one style or four, the colors are already aligned.

That level of coordination doesn't happen by accident. It's the result of treating color as a shared language across the collection, not a separate decision for each textile.

A palette that travels 

The collection opens in foundational neutrals, the warm linens, soft greiges, and quiet off-whites that anchor most interior schemes. From there, the palette moves through more luminous tones: yellows, soft terracottas, dusty roses. It deepens into blues, from powder to slate to near-midnight, before shifting toward richer, more saturated hues: burnt oranges, deep greens, complex reds. And it returns, finally, to quieter, more refined tones that bring a sense of resolution.

It's a palette with range. But also with coherence.

Versatility without compromise

That range means the collection can support very different interior directions without asking designers to compromise. A project anchored in neutrals has everything it needs within the collection. So does one that wants a deliberate moment of color. And because the palette works across all six styles, mixing textures within a single project or across multiple applications stays visually consistent.

 

This is the second in a series of three articles on the Definitive Collection.

Next up: how acoustical transparency works, and why the right textile makes all the difference. 

 

Explore the Definitive Collection