Our Top Picks From Stockholm Furniture Fair?s Greenhouse 2020
We share our favorite picks from Greenhouse, the Stockholm Furniture Fair's showcase of graduate and new designers.
Greenhouse, the Stockholm Furniture Fair’s showcase of graduate and new designers, usually includes every iteration of the humble chair you could possibly imagine ? and more. This year proved to be no exception ? but the strongest stand (above) was one which refused to show any furniture at all…
Clara Costes’ Hortus combines cabinetry with greenhouse design to create space for a tiny indoor garden, bringing us closer to nature.
Acorn by Kira Jang Usbeck and Camilla Holm Pallesen (of Denmark’s VIA Design & Business School) is a laundry bag with a difference ? unusually attractive and made from super-sustainable cork, it also takes up minimal space in your bathroom.
“Creating objects is like playing with the forces of nature at scale,” says Dutch designer David Dirksen, who is a regular in Milan, but was exhibiting for the first time in Stockholm. His Neolith Pendants, made in collaboration with Johan van Hengel, appear to defy gravity ? the seemingly heavy solid slabs of slate and marble are in fact hollow.
K-Series is Gellért Ollé’s degree project from the Maholy-Nagy University of Art and Design in Budapest and is extruded in a single piece.
Design Nikolai Fabricius calls this piece ‘Life’ saying, “A piece of furniture should exist for the user and stand firmly on the ground, but ...
Greenhouse, the Stockholm Furniture Fair’s showcase of graduate and new designers, usually includes every iteration of the humble chair you could possibly imagine ? and more. This year proved to be no exception ? but the strongest stand (above) was one which refused to show any furniture at all…
Clara Costes’ Hortus combines cabinetry with greenhouse design to create space for a tiny indoor garden, bringing us closer to nature.
Acorn by Kira Jang Usbeck and Camilla Holm Pallesen (of Denmark’s VIA Design & Business School) is a laundry bag with a difference ? unusually attractive and made from super-sustainable cork, it also takes up minimal space in your bathroom.
“Creating objects is like playing with the forces of nature at scale,” says Dutch designer David Dirksen, who is a regular in Milan, but was exhibiting for the first time in Stockholm. His Neolith Pendants, made in collaboration with Johan van Hengel, appear to defy gravity ? the seemingly heavy solid slabs of slate and marble are in fact hollow.
K-Series is Gellért Ollé’s degree project from the Maholy-Nagy University of Art and Design in Budapest and is extruded in a single piece.
Design Nikolai Fabricius calls this piece ‘Life’ saying, “A piece of furniture should exist for the user and stand firmly on the ground, but ...
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