At Home & Texture, our Art of Home series explores the ways creativity, culture, and design show up in the spaces we live in every day. From gallery walls to statement rugs and objects that blur the line between decor and sculpture, we believe a home should feel like a living collection of the things that truly inspire you. The best interiors don’t just look good—they tell stories about music, fashion, memory, and identity.
Which is exactly why it feels impossible to talk about the art of home right now without mentioning Curves by Sean Brown.
If you’ve spent any time online lately, you’ve probably seen the brand’s oversized knit tote bags popping up everywhere. The bold bags—with the word Curves wrapping dramatically across the side—have quickly become one of the most recognizable accessories on the design-adjacent internet. But while the totes are currently having a viral moment, they’re actually just one small piece of the larger creative world Toronto designer Sean Brown has been building for years.

Sean Brown is one of those creatives who moves fluidly across disciplines. Before Curves became known for its design objects and accessories, Brown was already making waves in the music world as a creative director and visual artist, working with artists like Daniel Caesar. That background matters because it shapes how Curves operates as a brand. Brown doesn’t treat design categories as separate silos. In his world, fashion, art, photography, music, and interiors all live in the same conversation. That’s why a knit tote bag can sit comfortably next to a hand-tufted rug or shoe-box shaped piggy bank and still feel like it belongs.
It’s all part of the same visual language.

Long before the tote bags started popping up on everyone’s feeds, Curves gained attention for a series of rugs shaped like compact discs—an ode to the physical music era that raised so many millennials. They’re nostalgic, playful, and instantly recognizable, the kind of pieces that make people stop mid-scroll. But they also represent something deeper about Brown’s design approach: taking familiar cultural objects and reframing them as something collectible.
It’s the same instinct that shows up in many of the brand’s pieces. The objects are playful, yes, but they’re also thoughtful. They reference music, memory, and culture in ways that feel personal rather than purely decorative.
The viral knit totes fit right into that philosophy. They’re bold but practical. Graphic but simple. They feel like an extension of the brand’s design language rather than a departure from it. And in a way, they’ve become the perfect ambassador for the brand. A tote bag is something you carry everywhere—it travels through grocery stores, subway platforms, studios, and offices. It’s a piece of design that lives in public.
So when the Curves totes started gaining traction online, it wasn’t just about the bags themselves. It was about people discovering the larger design universe behind them.

What makes Curves by Sean Brown interesting from the interior perspective is how naturally the brand connects fashion energy with interior design. Fashion has always influenced how we decorate our spaces. The same instincts that guide how we dress—color, texture, silhouette, mood—show up in the objects we bring into our homes.
Curves leans directly into that overlap. They’re designed to live with you, not just sit on a shelf. And they carry the kind of cultural references that make a space feel layered and personal.
The catchall tray, in a glossy black ceramic, was inspired by a deconstructed paper plane. The grooves taking the place of paper creases, form four compartments for all your necessities. On a table, in the bathroom, or anywhere you want to have easy and organized access to your everyday items.
Dimensions: W 233 mm (9.25") x L 187 mm (7.25") x H 20 mm (0.75")
That’s why the expansion from rugs to accessories to home objects doesn’t feel random. It feels inevitable. When a designer approaches creativity from a cultural perspective instead of a category perspective, the work naturally spreads across different forms.
A tote bag becomes an art object. A rug becomes a memory. A puzzle accessory becomes a conversation piece. Sean Brown seems to understand that the most compelling brands today don’t exist in just one lane. They exist in ecosystems. And Curves by Sean Brown is exactly that: a design ecosystem built from culture, nostalgia, and an instinct for objects that make people pause.
The tote bags might be going viral right now, but the design world behind them has been worth paying attention to all along.
Shop the full Curves by Sean Brown home collection, here.
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