V-king paravent
V-king paravent
Versace Home V-King paravent

V-king paravent

A charming paravent covered in fabric or leather with the V-shape logo quilting and the Barocco V Metal logo, polished Gold finishing. Brass hinges with polished finishing.

Story

Milestones

1978

Gianni Versace founds the fashion house

Gianni Versace, born 1946 in Reggio Calabria, opens his first boutique on Via della Spiga in Milan and presents his debut collection at La Permanente in March. The original company, registered as Gianni Versace Donna, will grow into the global luxury house headquartered today at Piazza Luigi Einaudi 4, Milan.

1982

Move into housewares

Versace expands beyond fashion into jewellery, china and textiles for the home — the first foothold of what will later be formalised as Versace Home.

1988

The Greca (Greek Key) motif debuts

Gianni Versace introduces the Greek Key in the Fall-Winter 1988 ready-to-wear collection. Decades later, La Greca returns as a defining pattern across Versace Home upholstery and bed linen.

1989

Atelier Versace haute couture

The Atelier Versace haute couture line is launched, presented for the first time in Paris.

1992

Versace Home interiors launch

Versace becomes one of the first fashion houses to launch a dedicated home-interiors line — beginning with textiles and quickly expanding to porcelain tableware through a partnership with the German manufacturer Rosenthal that is still running today.

1994

Vanitas chair

The wooden Vanitas chair, the earliest dated piece in the Versace Home furniture canon, debuts. It will be re-upholstered in velvet and re-presented at Salone del Mobile 2025.

1997

Gianni Versace assassinated; Donatella becomes Creative Director

Gianni Versace is murdered outside his Miami Beach home, Casa Casuarina, on 15 July 1997. His sister Donatella Versace, who had been Vice President since 1978, becomes Creative Director — a role she will hold until 2025.

2014

Blackstone takes a minority stake

Blackstone purchases a 20% stake in Versace for €210 million — the brand's first non-family ownership.

2019

Capri Holdings acquires Versace

On 2 January 2019, Capri Holdings (the former Michael Kors group) closes its acquisition of Versace for approximately US$2.1 billion.

2020

Versace Home furniture licensed to Lifestyle Design Group

Versace signs a licence with Lifestyle Design Group — the Italian home-design division of US-based Haworth Group — for the production and distribution of Versace Home furniture. The licence covers furniture only; textiles and accessories remain in-house, ceramics continue under Rosenthal, and wallpaper and floor tiles stay with their respective licensees.

2023

Rosenthal × Versace turns 30

The Rosenthal × Versace partnership marks 30 years with a limited mug collection that revives a 1993 design — gold-toned Barocco motifs paired with a Medusa lid.

2024

"If These Walls Could Talk" at Palazzo Versace

Salone del Mobile installation at the brand's original Milan atelier on Via Gesù 12 debuts the Medusa '95 Conversation Sofa, La Greca Bed, Lady Desk, and Moon Island sofa and armchair.

2025

Prada Group acquires Versace

Announced 10 April 2025 and closed 2 December 2025: Prada Group acquires Versace from Capri Holdings for €1.25 billion (~US$1.375 billion). The same year Donatella Versace steps down as Chief Creative Officer (effective 12 March) and becomes Chief Brand Ambassador (1 April); Dario Vitale is appointed Chief Creative Officer.

Inside

Construction

Wood + aluminium frame, PU and fiberfill padded

Frame combining wood structure with aluminium reinforcement, padded with polyurethane and fiberfill before being upholstered. Two materials in the substructure: the wood gives the screen its closed-cell rigidity for standing free; the aluminium gives the long verticals their stability without adding weight. The padding turns the screen from a hard partition into a quilted soft-touch surface — different from a folding screen with bare panels.

V-shaped logo quilting on the cover

The brand's framing: "covered in fabric or leather, with V-shaped logo quilting and the Barocco V Metal logo, with polished Gold finishing." The V-quilt geometry is the family's signature graphic register — same V-quilt vocabulary used on the V-King bed (id 426) headboard and on the V-Marble table (id 414) leather legs. Coordinates the paravent into V-King family rooms.

Barocco V Metal applique — polished Gold

Decorative element: Barocco V Metal logo in polished Gold finishing, applied to the screen surface. Same hardware register as the V-King bed: gold-finished metal Barocco V applique, not gold paint. The applique reads as the screen's primary fashion-house signature — visible at standing height as the screen functions as a room divider.

Brass hinges, polished finishing

Hinges in brass with polished finishing — the moving joints that allow the paravent to fold and unfold. Polished brass on the joint hardware coordinates with the polished Gold Barocco V Metal logo, keeping the metallic register consistent across decoration and mechanism. The brass is exposed (not covered in fabric/leather), making the hinges a visible architectural detail along the verticals.

Cover — fabric or leather, non-removable

The cover is fabric or leather (customer's choice), non-removable. The non-removable construction means the cover is integrated into the upholstery — the V-quilt pattern is sewn into the fabric/leather as part of the build, not as a slipcover. Choose fabric for softer registers or leather for harder, more architectural register; both work with the V-quilt + Barocco V Metal hardware.

Configurator

Modules

Two heights — 151 H or 181 H

Two heights — 151 H or 181 H

181 × 6 × 151 H cm or 181 × 6 × 181 H cm

Two published heights with identical 181 cm overall expanded width and 6 cm panel depth. The 151 H version sits below standing eye-line — partial separator that maintains visual continuity above the screen (use to separate a dressing area within a master bedroom while keeping the room's volume readable). The 181 H version sits at standing eye-line — full separator (use to define a private zone inside an open-plan bedroom or a closet entry partition). Per-panel width and panel count not published on LLG; treat as a 4-panel format from the visible packshot.

Trust

Certifications

LEED Gold

LEED Gold buildings

Versace's Milan headquarters at Piazza Luigi Einaudi 4 holds LEED Gold certification, and the Bal Harbour Shops boutique (Florida) is also certified to LEED Gold for interior design and construction (USGBC project record certified 18 December 2019).

FSC

FSC-certified paper packaging

All paper-based packaging components used by Versace are sourced from Forest Stewardship Council–certified suppliers. This certification covers packaging only; it does not extend to furniture wood.

Recognition

Exhibits & press

  • Luxury Living Group catalogue
    V-King family — paravent + bed + table

    The licensed manufacturer's V-King family includes this paravent, the V-King bed (id 426), and the V-Marble table (id 414). Three pieces bound by the V-quilt + Barocco V Metal applique register. The paravent extends the V-King vocabulary from horizontal furniture (bed, table) to a vertical room-defining element — completes the suite for a V-King-themed master bedroom.

    View
FAQ

Frequently asked

Different format and different role. The V-King bed (id 426) is the bed — 251 × 217 × 151 H, headboard designed as a room partition itself, brass + wengé feet. The V-King paravent is a freestanding folding screen — 181 × 6 × 151 H or 181 × 6 × 181 H, four panels wide, wood + aluminium frame, brass hinges. Both share V-quilt + Barocco V Metal hardware in polished Gold; the rest is different by use. Pair them in the same master bedroom for a coordinated V-King suite.

151 H sits below standing eye-line (most adults are 165–180 cm). Use 151 H to mark off a dressing zone within a master bedroom while keeping the room's volume open above the screen — visual continuity matters when the room has a high ceiling or tall windows you don't want to interrupt. 181 H sits at standing eye-line — use it to fully define a private zone (closet entry, bathing-area screen, dressing alcove). The 181 cm expanded width is identical in both — same floorprint, different visual height.

Fabric reads softer and more bedroom-appropriate — pair the paravent's fabric cover with fabric upholstery elsewhere in the room (bedhead, lounge chair). Leather reads more architectural and graphic — pair the paravent's leather cover with leather seating (Stiletto bergère, Versace Venus armchair) and harder hardware registers. Both options carry the same V-quilt and Barocco V Metal applique in polished Gold; the cover is non-removable so the choice is permanent — choose by the room's broader material register, not by the paravent alone.

The paravent's panels are joined by brass polished hinges — that's the published mechanism. The screen folds at each hinge to compress the floorprint when not deployed. The licensed manufacturer doesn't publish a folded-flat dimension or a transport configuration on the public page; the screen is built to live deployed in a master bedroom or dressing room rather than to be moved frequently. Treat as a permanent room element rather than a portable partition.

Yes — the V-shaped logo quilting on the paravent is the same V geometry that runs across the V-King family. The V is Versace Home's branded geometric mark, visible on the V-King bed's headboard quilting, the V-Marble table's leather-wrapped legs, and the V-King paravent's panels. Use the V-quilt continuity to make the V-King family read as a coordinated suite rather than three separate pieces — the V-quilt is the unifying graphic register, the polished Gold Barocco V Metal applique is the unifying hardware register.

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