Vue lecture

Il y a de nouveaux articles disponibles, cliquez pour rafraîchir la page.

Rimowa Classic Aluminium Grid Revives a Forgotten 1969 Design

Most luggage brands don’t have a 127-year-old story to draw from. Rimowa does, and it seems to know exactly when it’s worth pulling from that history and when to let the present speak for itself. With the Classic Aluminium Grid, they’ve clearly decided the archive deserves a second act.

The Classic Aluminium Grid is the German brand’s latest limited-edition release, and it’s generating the kind of quiet excitement that reserved design circles usually save for restored mid-century furniture or a first-edition book that resurfaces at auction. The reason is simple: Rimowa didn’t just design something new. They reached back to 1969, pulled out a hand-carry case design that had been sitting in their archives, and asked what it would look like today if it were treated with the same reverence they give to the grooves.

Designer: Rimowa

That grooved shell, by the way, is practically synonymous with the brand itself. You know a Rimowa from across an airport terminal. Those parallel ridges running down the aluminium surface are one of the most recognizable design signatures in travel goods, and they’ve been that way for decades. So when the brand quietly steps away from them and replaces the lines with a grid, a structured, geometric, embossed pattern pressed right into the aluminium shell, it feels like a real statement. It’s not a gimmick. It’s a choice that speaks to a different kind of confidence.

The grid comes from a real place. In 1969, Rimowa was producing hand-carry cases featuring this geometric pattern: practical, modular, and rooted in the kind of technical precision that defined that era’s design thinking. There’s a reason so much design from that decade still holds up. It wasn’t chasing aesthetics for their own sake. Form followed function, and it did so elegantly. Reviving that spirit in 2026 doesn’t read as nostalgia pandering. It reads as a brand that knows exactly where its DNA lives and isn’t afraid to dig for it.

The collection comes in three sizes: the Classic Hand-Carry Case, the Classic Cabin, and the Classic Trunk. All three are made in Cologne, Germany, which matters more than it might seem. Manufacturing location is one of those details that’s easy to gloss over until you’re actually holding the product, and with Rimowa, the German-made quality is part of the whole point. The embossed grid pattern, the blue leather handles, the individually numbered serial number patch on each case: these aren’t details you’d notice in a thumbnail. They’re details you notice after living with the piece and realising it only gets better over time.

And yes, price matters here. The Classic Aluminium Grid sits in the $2,725 to $3,225 range, which puts it firmly in the territory of deliberate, considered purchasing. That’s not casual spending, and it shouldn’t be. This is the kind of purchase that functions as an heirloom more than a travel accessory, something you keep, care for, and eventually pass along. The lifetime guarantee Rimowa extends to all its suitcases reinforces that framing. They’re not selling you a bag built for a few trips. They’re selling you something built to outlast most things currently in your home.

What makes this collection feel genuinely compelling rather than just another limited drop is the restraint behind it. Rimowa didn’t add bright colour for the sake of attention. They didn’t partner with a streetwear brand or commission someone’s artwork across the shell. They went to their own archive, found something worth preserving, and let the design carry the weight. The grid is subtle enough that it won’t read as flashy at baggage claim, but anyone paying close attention will recognise it as something different. Something that doesn’t quite look like everything else on the carousel.

That’s a hard balance to strike in design. Loud enough to be interesting, quiet enough to be enduring. The Classic Aluminium Grid lands squarely in that space, and for a brand with over a century of aluminium behind it, that feels less like luck and more like a brand that knows exactly what it’s doing.

The post Rimowa Classic Aluminium Grid Revives a Forgotten 1969 Design first appeared on Yanko Design.

❌