Stefon Diggs Debuts Luxury Furniture, Si Vis Pacem

There's a particular kind of quiet that follows intensity — the kind athletes understand better than most. Stefon Diggs has spent years navigating roaring stadiums and the relentless demands of performance. Now, with Si Vis Pacem, he's building spaces that move in the opposite direction.

Debuted at Design Miami during Art Basel, the collection seeks refuge rather than attention.

sanctuary built from soft edges

The pieces themselves resist sharpness. An elevated sofa with the ease of a futon. H-shaped chrome chairs that sit backless, open, unassuming. Mirrors wrapped in fur, their edges irregular and organic. Coffee tables dressed in cow leather, with forms that feel pulled from nature rather than sketched on a grid.

Everything here leans into curves, textures that mimic earth, and silhouettes that don't demand a specific room or aesthetic to belong. They're sculptural without being precious. Functional without losing warmth.

Diggs described the line as functional art meant to restore and ground daily rituals, a response to the noise of a life lived at full speed. The furniture isn't about making a statement. It's about making space — for rest, for breath, for the kind of stillness that only arrives when everything around you feels intentional.

This isn't his first step into design. Last year, he collaborated with Paulin Paulin Paulin, testing the waters and finding his footing in a world far removed from the field. Si Vis Pacem feels like the next chapter: more personal, more certain, and entirely his own.

where form follows feeling

What stands out is the restraint. The collection launched as a capsule — five pieces available by commission, with a broader selection planned for 2026. There's no rush to flood the market, no scramble to be everywhere at once. Just a careful introduction of work that prioritizes atmosphere over abundance.

The materials are tactile and grounded. Real animal fur wraps the mirrors (though not without criticism), plush olive-green upholstery anchors the lounge chair, and chrome reflects light without coldness. Each piece carries weight, literally and emotionally, designed to settle into a home rather than compete with it.

It's luxury without loudness — thoughtful, deliberate, and rooted in the belief that a home should be a sanctuary where the noise of the outside world dissolves.

creating peace through design

Athletes entering creative fields isn't new, but there's something genuine about how Diggs has approached this. He's not slapping his name on someone else's vision. He's building environments that reflect his own need for calm — spaces that acknowledge the intensity of his daily life while offering something softer on the other side.

The furniture feels like it understands contrast: the rush and the stillness, the public and the private, the noise and the silence that follows. It's design that doesn't try to solve everything, but it does create room for what comes next.

Si Vis Pacem is available for commission now, with the full collection arriving in 2026.

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