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Livingetc
Livingetc
Julia Demer

Is This Shocking Purple the New Shade of Spring? Aimee Song Seems to Think So

The violet Sutton Rug from Aimee Song's new Lulu and Georgia collection, pictured in a sunny bedroom.

Forget butter yellow. Spring’s most surprising color story might just be royal purple. At least, that’s the takeaway from Aimee Song’s new collaboration with Lulu and Georgia, where nestled among an otherwise soft, neutral palette sits the “Sutton Rug” — a deep, electric violet that feels like a refreshing curveball.

Of course, Aimee Song is no stranger to setting the curve. One of the original fashion bloggers — she launched Song of Style in 2008, just as the idea of digital influence was beginning to take shape — Aimee has spent the last 15 years orbiting the upper echelons of taste. She’s worn head-to-toe Valentino to fashion week, celebrated her baby shower courtesy of Dior, and has the kind of Rolodex that includes Alessandro Michele and Tiffany & Co. Naturally, she also has her own knitwear brand (Amiya), a consistent front-row presence, and a laidback coastal-cool house full of impeccably curated furniture to match.

All of which is to say: if she’s betting on a color trend this season, we’re paying attention.

The hand-loomed Sutton Rug in violet viscose casts a soft glow in sun-drenched rooms. (Image credit: Lulu and Georgia)
Aimee Song’s new Lulu and Georgia collection is awash in warm neutrals, making this particular violet all the more subversive. (Image credit: Lulu and Georgia)
Violet grounds natural wood with a moody richness, especially against the sculptural curves of the Fontaine Nightstand. (Image credit: Lulu and Georgia)

The Sutton Rug might seem like an outlier at first — a cool-toned violet in a sea of rusts and oatmeals — but it’s a deliberate one. The shade has been quietly gaining momentum in high-design circles: it’s a hue Aimee has sported in Loewe trousers, echoed by rug brands like Nordic Knots, and often styled alongside its complementary foil, sage green.

It’s a high-impact color combination that leans more “highbrow organic” than Barney & Friends — a little offbeat, a little regal, and delightfully unfussy.

That’s the quiet thesis of the entire collection. The Lulu and Georgia spring line includes curved-edge sofas, botanical grasscloth wallpaper, sculptural ceramics, and art-forward lighting. It doesn’t stink of “celebrity collab" in the slightest, but rather, something more personal, like a visual diary from someone who’s spent a lot of time in beautiful hotel suites and even more time figuring out how to recreate the feeling at home.

The Sutton Rug’s other shade — a deep sage — feels right at home alongside the cinnamon-toned Neve Chaise and Telle Side Table. (Image credit: Lulu and Georgia)

Which is exactly what she’s done. The collection merges high-fashion sensibility with interiors fluency — nothing is too loud, but everything knows exactly what it’s doing.

If purple is, indeed, the new neutral, Aimee Song might have just made the case.


While you might know Aimee best for her avant-garde ensembles and long-running collaborations with fashion’s most influential names, this collection wasn’t exactly out of left field: she actually studied Interior Architecture at university. In many ways, the project was a full-circle moment — one that’s been quietly building in the background.

“Wow, nearly 3 years in the making, and it’s almost here!” she shared in a recent Instagram post. “I’ve created my dream home collection, designed to be timeless and evolve with you. I can’t believe I had just one little baby when I started working on this, and now I have a toddler and another baby!” It's a milestone launch, in more ways than one.

Curves are a constant, from lighting to mirrors to these chairs, softening a wood-paneled backdrop with a whisper of movement. (Image credit: Lulu and Georgia)
Sculptural flourishes are everywhere in Aimee's debut, like the whimsically shaped Tosca Vase, richly textured in earthenware. (Image credit: Lulu and Georgia)
There’s fashion flair, of course — but the real surprise is the quiet heirloom feel: fringed ottomans, softened silhouettes, and pieces that seem like they’ve always been here. (Image credit: Lulu and Georgia)
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