Dear readers,
I’m Sara Core, and today I want to talk about something quieter than theory and stronger than trend — the feminine energy that shapes modern design.
When you look at a space touched by a woman’s hand, something shifts. The geometry softens. The light bends differently. It’s not decoration — it’s intuition.
At PletoStudio, I see this every day. In the way Alina Maslenko molds light with gentleness and certainty — as if she listens to what the material wants to become. There’s a kind of dialogue in her process that feels both ancient and deeply modern. Clay, wool, and paper pulp turn into sculptures that glow not with electricity, but with empathy.
Feminine design isn’t about softness in form — it’s about depth in perception. It senses rhythm instead of controlling it. It lets texture speak, lets time breathe, lets silence exist.
I often think that women don’t create objects — they nurture presence. They give shape to atmosphere. And that’s what makes light emotional — not its brightness, but its sensitivity.
At PletoStudio, this energy becomes visible. It flows through each curve, each fold, each surface that carries both precision and grace. The lamps don’t dominate; they listen. They hold the kind of calm that feels like a heartbeat.
Perhaps that’s the secret of truly contemporary design — it’s no longer about power, but about resonance. About feeling more, not owning more.
In a world built on speed, feminine energy reminds us that gentleness is not the opposite of strength — it’s its purest form.
With quiet admiration and light,
Sara Core
Trends & Style Editor at PletoStudio




