Tuesday from Stockholm Design Week 2025

The Dezeen team are reporting live from Stockholm Design Week in the Swedish capital, where blown glass, woven grass and wiggly furniture caught our collective eye on 4 February.   6.00pm – put a plug in it For the last post in our live coverage from Tuesday in Stockholm, Dezeen's design editor Jennifer Hahn misquotes The post Tuesday from Stockholm Design Week 2025 appeared first on Dezeen.

Feb 5, 2025 - 12:10
 0
Tuesday from Stockholm Design Week 2025
horses in stockholm snow

The Dezeen team are reporting live from Stockholm Design Week in the Swedish capital, where blown glass, woven grass and wiggly furniture caught our collective eye on 4 February.


 

6.00pm – put a plug in it

For the last post in our live coverage from Tuesday in Stockholm, Dezeen's design editor Jennifer Hahn misquotes René Magritte: ceci n'est pas une butt plug, she writes, about what is, the designer claims, in fact a large wooden stool created by Konstfack student Adam Fredrik Olsson as a tongue-in-cheek parody on the design industry and its gender skew.

giant wooden butt plug
The designer describes the piece of wooden furniture as a stool

Also being exhibited as part of the Konstfack show at Stockholm Furniture Fair is a series of furniture by Björn Olsson made using mycelium, which was used to clean toxic contaminants from a local industrial area in a process known as mycoremediation.

Chair with long back in an exhibition space
Björn Olsson furniture collection was made with mycelium. Images Jennifer Hahn

 

5.45pm – call me maybe

Fredrick Nielsen invited journalists into his neon pink workshop to blow glass and drink champagne from the heaviest and most decadent goblets Stockholm has probably ever seen.

man blowing molten glass in workshop
Fredrick Nielsen's studio is currently bright pink

The Swedish artist emblazons his mobile number onto most of his work, including on a large bronze coin which is installed at a school, often leading to phone calls from baffled members of the public, he told Dezeen.

giant heavy glass goblet
Journalists were invited to blow glass and drink champagne (in that order!). Images by Jane Englefield

 

5.15pm – crocheted grass chair

The same rush grass used to make tatami mats has been made into ropes and crocheted into upholstery to create the Igusa rope chair by Japanese studio Tokyo Product.

Rush grasses used for crochet
The Igusa rope chair was crocheted from rush grasses

"There is currently only one craftsman in Japan who has this skill," said founder Yoshiaki Koda.

The chair is on display at the Stockholm Furniture Fair 2025
The chair is on display at the Stockholm Furniture Fair 2025

Sadly, the base is still made from polyurethane foam, but Koda says the chair is still in development, so there is room for improvement. – Jennifer Hahn

The crocheted grass upholsters a foam seat
The crocheted grass upholsters a foam seat. Images by Jennifer Hahn

 

4.45pm – scented sanctuary

Swedish design studio All Matters Studio has created a peaceful space where visitors can escape the hustle and bustle of the fair and experience a scent installation.

exhibition stand for displaying perfume bottles
Giant alchemists' bottles were on display  

Designed for its artisan perfume brand En Doft, the minimalist space features a wooden walkway which leads visitors into all-white spaces scented by the brand.

wooden plank walkway with mud
A wooden walkway makes up part of the installation

As well as premiering its new Insula Mane scent, with top notes of bergamot and eucalyptus, visitors can experience its woody Domus Sanctus perfume.

Branch hanging in an exhibition display area
The exhibition provides a peaceful space

All Matters Studio decorated the space with naked tree branches and alchemists' bottles. The result is a calming stand with a more sensory experience – leading one visitor to wonder why all fairs don't think more about how they smell. – Cajsa Carlson

Metal plinth standing in mossy footing
Images by Cajsa Carlson

Find out about All Matters Studio's other event happening this week – a flower shop takeover › 


 

4.15pm – Dezeen Dispatch spotted in the wild

man reading a magazine
Dezeen Dispatch is available across Stockholm during design week. Image by Jane Englefield

 

4.00pm – defiantly knobbly furniture

Norwegian designer Anna Maria Øfstedal Eng is showing as part of Hanna Nova Beatrice's Älvsjö Gård project for experimental and collectible design at the fair.

Using American hard maple leftover from a previous project, Øfstedel Eng has created a series of knobbly furniture that echoes the defiant twists and turns of tree roots.

knobbly chair
Chairs feature natural and designed knobbles

"Wood is so strong," she told Dezeen's Jane Englefield at the fair. "If it wants to force itself into a fence, it will."

Exhibition stand of furniture
Images by Jane Englefield

 

3.30pm – pack your snus

Perhaps the most Swedish thing we've seen so far is this project by designer Melissa Ciardullo, which explores alternative packaging solutions for snus – tobacco pouches that are stuffed under the upper lip and left to dissolve.

snus packaging
Melissa Ciardullo has designed alternative packaging for snus

Swedes currently smoke the least out of all Europeans, but snus is used daily by 14 per cent of adult Swedes, creating a huge amount of plastic packaging waste.

The exhibit shows different snus holders of old
The exhibit displays snus holders from different generations. Images by Jennifer Hahn

Ciardullo's project – part of an exhibition on Plastic Perspectives in Stockholm Furniture Fair's Hall C – explores the pros and cons of switching to reusable tins or bioplastic packaging. – Jennifer Hahn


 

3.00pm – Swedish design is f***ing amazing

Swedish design has long been associated with minimalism – or IKEA, whose affordable, practical furniture is now synonymous with the country around the world. But in recent years, Sweden's design scene has become increasingly varied.

With a difficult economic environment contributing to an uptick in innovative design, designers are blending traditional craft with new technology and focusing on sustainability.

Cajsa Carlson takes the temperature of the country's design, speaking with designers about emerging trends amidst chatter that Swedish design is having a "more interesting moment" than in the '90s.


 

2.00pm – last night's dinner

Deputy editor Cajsa Carlson started her week in Stockholm with a dinner at textile brand Svensson's showroom in Södermalm.

Svensson worked with designer Shane Schneck and fashion designer Angelo da Silveira on the exhibition, Malleables, which saw them create new types of products from Svensson's leftover materials.

Three people stood in front of a curtain
Shane Schneck (left) has collaborated with Svensson on squishy sofas (front left)

Schneck designed a collection of squishy sofas and stools from foam and textile, while Da Silveria made reversible vests that will be worn by Svensson staff. The exhibition will remain on show for a few months.

And while the vegetarian dinner by Studio Marion lacked the ubiquitous Swedish meatball, it did feature a round dish – tasty Tuscan Gnudi dumplings filled with basil and ricotta.

Table laid with flowers and plates
Studio Marion catered the vegetarian meal. Images by Cajsa Carlson

 

1.45pm – Dezeen design disruptors

Dezeen design and environment editor Jennifer Hahn is moderating a fascinating discussion in our second Design Disruptors talk, titled Materials of the future.

Addressing a full auditorium at Stockholm Furniture Fair, the panel tackle the knotty subject of moving away from harmful materials, writes Max Fraser.

"We need a thousand different alternatives, not just one solution," said Celine Sandberg as her company Agoprene tackles fossil fuel-derived polyurethane foam with seaweed-based alternative. "Ours is just one of them."

four people seated on stage in front of colourful backdrop
Dezeen's Jennifer Hahn (right) moderates Materials of the future panel discussion. Image Max Fraser

"The expectations around scale of sales is not compatible with the finite resources that are available," said Natsai Audrey Chieza. "We have to work out how to replace petroleum, but there are many complex systems we need to unpick first."

Note Design Studio's Cristiano Pigazzini said "quite often it is time and money that trips up progress. Companies are not willing to invest in those things when developing a new product."


 

1.00pm – six emerging designers

Although originally conceived as a way for Swedish manufacturers to launch products, Stockholm Furniture Fair now shines an almost equally sized spotlight on young, up-and-coming designers.

Dezeen design editor Jennifer Hahn has picked the ones to watch for 2025.

Taking place from 4 to 8 February, Stockholm Furniture Fair (SFF) is Scandinavia's biggest design fair and the anchor event of Stockholm Design Week.

For work by emerging talents, head to the Greenhouse area in Hall C and Hanna Nova Beatrice's collectible design exhibition Älvsjö Gård in Hall A.


 

12.30pm – I love lamp

lady with a lamp on her head
Image by Jennifer Hahn

Unofficial icon of the fair is this woman dressed like a lamp. Who is she? Where is she going? Will she ever take it off? I guess we’ll never know! [Ed. note: we will if you go and ask her, Jen!] 


 

12.15pm – ICYMI

Dezeen is now in print! Those at Stockholm Design Week can pick up Dezeen Dispatch at various locations across the city. Everyone else can read a digital version of the newspaper here.

Written by the Dezeen editorial team, the 40-page newspaper-style publication contains features and interviews along with our highlights of this year's event.

The publication, the first of its kind for Dezeen, will be available for free at venues throughout the design week (3-9 February).

Dezeen launches Dezeen Dispatch at Stockholm Design Week
Dezeen launches Dezeen Dispatch at Stockholm Design Week

 

11.45am – Milan lends a hand

Stockholm has long lacked an equivalent to Milan's legendary Bar Basso – an après-furniture fair watering hole where designers and industry insider can gather for a negroni sbagliato or three.

low lit bar
Guldbaren, or gold bar, is hoping to become Stockholm's version of Milan's Bar Basso. Image Jennifer Hahn

But this year, Stockholm Design Week kicked off with a cocktail evening at the Nobis Hotel's Guldbaren, organised in collaboration with Basso's very own Maurizio Stocchetto, who flew in from Italy for the occasion.

The golden mirror-panelled bar is hoping to establish itself as the festival's go-to place to see and be seen – Jennifer Hahn


 

11.30am – is AI too good?

Faye Toogood is now on the main stage of Stockholm Furniture Fair for the keynote talk, with Dezeen's deputy editor Cajsa Carlson.

Toogood asks "surely AI can design an AI-Faye Toogood chair better than Faye Toogood?"

two women on stage
Faye Toogood is the Stockholm Furniture Fair guest of honour this year. Image by Max Fraser

"If we don't hold onto craftsmanship, we will lose it," she adds. "The role of a designer is to connect more to humanity and the human action of working with our hands." – Max Fraser

This talk is part of Design Disruptors: Dezeen talks at Stockholm Furniture Fair 2025.

Find out more on Dezeen Events Guide › 

Carlson interviewed Toogood ahead of this year's event – check it out below.


 

11.15am – Swedish models!

Local office Note Design Studio is showing its debut architecture project at its city showroom, which is set within a former bank and still features an old telephone booth and the original vault – now used as a (very) secure meeting room.

architecture models
Note's first architecture project is a timber-clad home

The project is Villa Ottsjö, a timber-clad house close to Åre, northern Sweden. Positioned on a hilly site, the home is made up of three identical volumes with pitched roofs.

bank vault meeting room
Now Note's showroom, the former bank features an original telephone booth

Interlinked but offset from each other, the buildings were arranged to maximise windows and make the most of the rural setting.

models and display
The design features three interlinked, pitched volumes. Images by Jane Englefield

"It was to follow the height curves better, but also it means that each volume gets a small glimpse of the mountains," architect Jesper Mellgren told Dezeen.

Villa Ottsjö is Note Design Studio's first foray into architecture and more projects are in the works – Jane Englefield


 

11.00am – embarrassing things

Guest of honour Faye Toogood has taken over the entrance hall of the Stockholm Furniture Fair with an installation titled Manufracture, aiming to "demystify the process of designing and making".

furniture displayed on scaffolding
Faye Toogood's "embarrassing things" are on display at the entrance to Stockholm Furniture Fair

"This is an installation where I've emptied my archive," she told journalists. "It's almost a live sketchbook. It's showing things that I'm embarrassed about."

big banner reading manufracture
Images by Jennifer Hahn

"It's showing things that never went into production," she added. "There is a resin table in the corner, which is a material I wouldn't choose today." – Jennifer Hahn

Find out more about Stockholm Furniture Fair on Dezeen Events Guide › 


 

10.30am – frank in the loom

The beloved Swedish heritage brand Svenkst Tenn, 140 years after the birth of designer and longtime collaborator Frank Josef, is showing an in-store exhibition as an homage to Josef.

interior design with yellow picture and chair
Colourful textiles cover the floors and walls of the Svenkst Tenn space

Titled Frank in the Loom, the show features a collection of handwoven rag rugs crafted from repurposed textiles originally designed by Josef, combined with Svenskt Tenn's signature linen – Jane Englefield

loom weave with colourful rug
Images by Jane Englefield

 

10.15am – Dezeen Dispatch

On the eve of Stockholm Design Week, Dezeen hosted a welcome dinner at the National Museum.

Staged in partnership with Nordic Nest, the dinner took place in the grand environs of the museum's Södra Ljusgården and brought together international journalists and Stockholm's design community.

Two long tables set out for dinner
The dinner was hosted in the Södra Ljusgården of the National Museum. Image by Max Fraser

Throughout the evening, representatives from Nordic brands Iittala, Fritz Hansen, Audo Copenhagen, Gärsnäs and Louis Poulsen introduced new products to the audience.

Presentation of products
Dezeen's Max Fraser (right) hosted the evening, introducing Nordic brands. Image by Jennifer Hahn

The evening culminated in the unveiling of Dezeen's new print publication, Dezeen Dispatch.

Guests keenly perused their copies, including Claesson Koivisto Rune's Eero Koivisto who gave it a solid thumbs up – Max Fraser

Image by Max Fraser
Eero Koivisto was one of the first to get his hands on Dezeen Dispatch. Image by Max Fraser

 

10:00am – hej Stockholm!

Dezeen's editorial director Max Fraser, editor-at-large Amy Frearson, deputy editor Cajsa Carlson, design editor Jennifer Hahn, social editor Clara Finnigan and design and interiors reporter Jane Englefield are on the ground in Stockholm reporting from Stockholm Design Week (SDW).

Dezeen is hosting a series of events in the city this year, including our Design Disruptors talks, the Dezeen Awards 2025 launch party and an event celebrating the first-ever Dezeen newspaper (which launched last night – more to follow soon!).

Illustration of two people walking in snow

Dezeen Events Guide has created an SDW guide, highlighting the key events at the festival this year.

As the 2025 event gets under way, take a look at ten unmissable exhibitions and installations – including Stockholm Furniture Fair 2025, a pop-up by Form Us With Love and an exhibition by David Taylor at Bukowskis auction house.


 

See Dezeen Events Guide for all the latest information you need to know to attend the event, as well as a list of other architecture and design events taking place around the world.

All times are Stockholm time.

The lead image is by Jane Englefield.

The post Tuesday from Stockholm Design Week 2025 appeared first on Dezeen.