Kartell Jellies Wall Hook (Ø13), Set of 2 — Patricia Urquiola’s Textured Wall Accent
Share
A small hook with a strong surface
Kartell’s Jellies Wall Hook (Ø13) arrives as a set of two, designed to work like punctuation on a wall rather than background hardware. Its defining feature is the textured face, which catches light differently as you move through the room. Seen up close, it reads as a decorative “button” first—then a practical hook.

Kartell’s plastic know-how, used as a graphic tool
Since the mid-century, Kartell has treated plastics as a design language—where color, transparency, and surface finish are part of the form. The Jellies hook fits that lineage: it’s an everyday accessory made legible through material effects rather than added ornament. For the product context and collection positioning, see Kartell’s own listing for Jellies coat hangers.

From tabletop patterning to the wall
Patricia Urquiola developed Jellies as a family of patterned plastic pieces for Kartell—rooted in the idea of mold-made textures and repeating geometries. Her studio documents the tableware project as Jellies Tableware (Kartell, 2014). The wall hooks extend that surface logic into an architectural detail, presented among Urquiola’s Kartell additions around Salone del Mobile 2015, as reported by designboom.
What the design gets right on the wall
The Ø13 scale is intentionally compact: it can anchor a small entry moment without turning the wall into a storage system. Because each hook is essentially a round face with a pronounced relief, pairing two creates a deliberate rhythm—especially when installed with slight offsets instead of strict symmetry. For the canonical reference, keep the Product page close at hand while planning placement.

Installation story
A customer review notes the Pink option, with delivery beginning on January 6, 2025. In practice, that color choice reinforces the piece’s “wall-object” character—less utility closet, more intentional accent. The photo reads as a quick, clean install that lets the texture do the work.

Where it fits best
This is a good match for entryways that need a light touch—keys, a small bag, or a single layer rather than bulky outerwear. It also works in bathrooms and dressing areas where reflective surfaces already play a role. In open-plan spaces, treat it like a small wall composition: two hooks can balance a mirror or a framed print without competing for attention.
#Kartell #PatriciaUrquiola #Jellies #WallHook #CoatHook #EntrywayDesign #ItalianDesign #ModernInteriors #PlasticDesign #TexturedSurface #WallAccessories #SmallSpaceDesign #ColorInInteriors #DesignDetails #HomeOrganization