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  "path": "/issues/2026-4-18/sophie-lou-jacobsen",
  "publishedAt": "2026-04-18T00:00:00.000Z",
  "site": "https://airmail.news",
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  "textContent": "\n\n  “When I discovered Memphis it really triggered something in me, because of the combination of how fun it is and how beautiful it is.”\n\n##### Inspired by the Memphis Group and known for her playful, wavy home goods, the French-American designer is now channeling Italo disco in a new series unveiled at Milan’s Salone del Mobile\n\nBy Elena Clavarino\n\nIf the name Sophie Lou Jacobsen doesn’t ring a bell, her designs very well might. There are a few ways that could be true: should you be on the houseware side of the Instagram algorithm, Jacobsen’s wavy glass Ripple Cup, which went viral in 2020, surely appeared on your feed; should you be an art-history person, her wiggly, neon-pop silhouettes might call to mind Ettore Sottsass’s Memphis Group; and should you be an avid _New York Times_ reader, you’d know Jacobsen as the woman leading a new wave of a budding design movement described last fall in a story titled “Glassware Is Getting Weird and Wobbly.” READ ON",
  "title": "Sophie Lou Jacobsen"
}