Since founding his studio in 2015, Luke has collaborated with a variety of brands and institutions to produce ranges of furniture, clothing and accessories. Working often with heritage brands, galleries and museums, Luke’s designs are characterised by his signature sense of romance and theatricality, and bold approach to colour and pattern.
Selected Collaborations
2025
When it opened in 1856, the National Portrait Gallery was arguably the first national public gallery in the world dedicated to portraits. Cecil Beaton’s Fashionable World, which opened in October 2025, was an exhibition focused solely on Beaton’s ground-breaking contributions to fashion and portrait photography. For the shop at the National Portrait Gallery, Luke created a range of drawings inspired by Beaton’s fashion photography, which were applied to t-shirts, ties, tote bags, badges and more.
National Portrait Gallery
Photography by Luke
2025
Glyndebourne is one of the most celebrated opera houses in the world, delivering performances to some 150,000 people across a summer festival and autumn season, and a year-round programme of learning & engagement activity. Luke was invited by Glyndebourne's Head of Exhibitions and Collections Nerissa Taysom and Archivist Phil Boot to collaborate with the opera house for its summer 2025 season. During this period, Luke took over Glyndebourne's Archive Gallery where he reimagined the world of Oliver Messel in a site-specific mural and series of original works on paper. Luke's show took place as part of the wider Oliver Messel exhibition at Glyndebourne: Oliver Messel: Designer. Maker. Influencer.
Glyndebourne
2025
The Louvre is home to some of the most canonical works of Western Art. To celebrate the Tuileries, which form an integral part of the Louvre estate, the museum entrusted its historic garden to Luke in the spring of 2025. The resulting collection for the shop at the Louvre comprised everything one might need for a pastoral picnic: a wicker basket filled with enamel plates, napkins, a tablecloth and more.
Louvre
Photography by Ollie Tomlinson
2025, 2022 & 2019
Founded in 1735, Ginori's porcelain company soon became the most distinguished manufacturer in Italy, a reputation upheld to the present day. Luke launched a collaboration with Ginori during Milan’s Salone del Mobile in April 2019. Entitled Il Viaggio di Nettuno, the collection was inspired by Luke’s love of Greek and Roman mythology, and in particular, Neptune, the Roman god of the sea. Luke has also designed a small home fragrance collection for Ginori entitled Profumi Luchino, and a second chapter of Il Viaggio di Nettuno was introduced in 2025.
Ginori
Photography by James Harvey-Kelly
2025
Luke's limited edition collection of furniture and accessories made in collaboration with The Lacquer Company launched in spring 2025. Handmade in Vietnam, the collection comprised a coffee table, chest of drawers, nightstand, mirrors, trays and a wastepaper basket. The items, which Luke collectively named Benedict, featured trompe l'oeil painted decoration, inspired by the antique Regency painted furniture that Luke loves and collects.
The Lacquer Company
Photography by Ollie Tomlinson
2022
Rubelli, theVenetian family-run company now in its fifth generation, has been creating, producing and selling furnishing products, in particular fabrics, for residential and contract use since 1889. During Milan Design Week 2022, Luke presented Return to Arcadia: a capsule collection of thirteen printed, woven and plain fabrics created in collaboration with Rubelli.
Rubelli
Photography by Stefano Scatà
2022 & 2019
Svenskt Tenn (‘Swedish Pewter’) is a Swedish interior design company, founded in 1924 in Stockholm by Estrid Ericson, an art teacher and pewter artist from Hjo, Sweden. Following on from his 2019 collaboration with Svenskt Tenn, Luke was invited to collaborate once again with the company, this time on their Christmas 2022 collection of decorations and table accessories.
Svenskt Tenn
2022
The Victoria and Albert Museum in London is the world's largest museum of applied arts, decorative arts and design, housing a permanent collection of over 2.27 million objects. Fashioning Masculinities: The Art of Menswear opened at the V&A in March 2022. The exhibition explored how designers, tailors and artists – and their clients and sitters – have constructed and performed masculinity, and unpicked it at the seams. The V&A commissioned Luke to create a range of drawings inspired by two of the exhibition's key themes. These were sold in the museum's shop as limited edition prints, as well as being applied to t-shirts, scarves, tote bags, badges and notebooks.
V&A
2020
Gant is an American-Swedish clothing brand that is inextricably linked with preppy style. Founded in 1949 by Bernard Gantmacher in New Haven, Connecticut, GANT is now headquartered in Stockholm, Sweden. In early 2020, Gant’s then Creative Director Christopher Bastin invited Luke to create a capsule collection of clothing for men and women. Luke flew to Stockholm and spent a fruitful day rooting through the label’s extensive archive, exploring the vintage pieces and collectables stored there. The resulting collection was launched in several European countries in November 2020.
Gant
Photography by Amber Pinkerton
2019
The story of Lanvin, France's oldest couture house still in operation, began in 1889, at a small hat shop in the heart of Paris. In January 2019, Lanvin’s then Creative Director Bruno Sialelli commissioned Luke to design the invitation for his debut menswear show, which took place in June 2019. Luke’s collaboration with Lanvin continued when he was invited to create a mural for the house’s store at 150 Mercer Street in New York City.
Lanvin
Photography by Jack Bool

