Desire Over Consumption: The Hands-On Approach to Luxury Interiors

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LUXUO examines how a generation of international artisans — shaped by cultural awareness and digital fatigue — is driving the resurgence of handcrafted furniture and décor over mass-produced pieces in the global interiors market. Often balancing the needs of ageing parents and young families, today’s homeowners approach furniture with a combination of desire and discernment — favouring pieces that endure and develop character over time.

Craft is no longer solely a decorative luxury, but a value system rooted in human skill and material integrity. Handcrafted furniture — designed to be maintained and repaired — reflects a contemporary appreciation for sustainability and the visible hand of the maker, offering emotional and functional value in equal measure.

Ariake: Japanese Craft Reinvented For Global Interiors

Ariake, Koi Chair
Gabriel Tan observing a Japanese artisan construct his “Koi” chair at Ariake factory. Image: Ariake.

Ariake — founded in Morodomi, Saga Prefecture, Japan — is a collaborative craft endeavour involving highly skilled companies and worldwide designers. Each piece — from lattice benches to paperwood tables — combines traditional Japanese carpentry techniques, natural materials such as cedar and hinoki and modern design concepts. The brand’s attitude emphasises living and social rituals, with products designed for meeting areas rather than just decoration.

Ariake, Koi Chair
Koi chair designed by Gabriel Tan for Ariake. Image: Ariake.

Its furniture has been exhibited abroad as part of a larger narrative reintroducing handmade Japanese craft to a discerning global audience. Stocked at Grafunkt, Ariake’s combination of extensive material expertise and cross-cultural design dynamism places it at the forefront of interiors that honour tradition while looking forward.

Molly Mahon: Hand Block-Printed Wallpapers & Textiles

Molly Mahon — a British printmaker — interprets heritage craft through a personal viewpoint, creating rustic yet sophisticated wallpapers and fabrics. Her block prints — inspired by the Ashdown Forest’s flora — combine centuries-old techniques with a colourful, modern palette. Mahon’s studio reintroduces hand-carving and printing techniques in ways that appeal to luxury interiors through pattern and texture.

Molly Mahon
Molly Mahon’s textiles embrace handmade prints. Image: Molly Mahon.

Her work — distributed by luxury design companies such as Schumacher — has expanded beyond niche craft to influence how producers combine local inspiration with worldwide distribution, appealing to designers seeking authenticity and texture in interior finishes.

Hors-Studio: Recycled Materials Turned Into Design Objects

Hors studio, julie limont for lemonde.fr
Rebecca Fezard (left) and Elodie Michaud in their workshop, Transfaire La Manufacture, in Neuvy-le-Roi. Image: Julie Limont for Lemonde.fr.

Rebecca Fezard and Elodie Michaud manage the French design atelier Hors-Studio — which tackles material innovation through low-tech craft by repurposing industrial waste into furniture and interior components. Their characteristic “Leatherstone” — formed from discarded leather compacted into stone-like slabs — appears in tables and sculptural items that convey both sustainability and luxury.

Hors studio, Tuf furniture, Florent Tanet

“Leatherstone” furniture pieces from the Tuf collection. Image: Florent Tanet.

The studio also uses natural fibres such as mussel byssus in textile installations. Their practice — which was recognised with the 2025 Liliane Bettencourt Prize for Manual Intelligence — challenges the limits between raw material, craft method and interior application.

Singapore’s Proud Modern Craftsmen

Nathan Yong's Mirror Stand. Image: NHB Singapore.
Nathan Yong’s Rattan vanity stand. Image: NHB Singapore.

Craft X Design 2.0 — a project of Singapore’s National Heritage Board (NHB) — brings together contemporary designer Nathan Yong and traditional craftspeople such as rattan maker Chen Foo Kee, wood-carving Francis Tan and embroidery artisan Heath Yeo to reinterpret old crafts for modern surroundings.

Heath Yeo's lamp with artisanal embroidery inspired by his Peranakan lineage. Image: NHB Singapore.
Heath Yeo’s lamp with artisanal embroidery on its shade is inspired by his Peranakan lineage. Image: NHB Singapore.

The result is a rattan vanity, wood-carved vases and embroidered lighting that combine labour-intensive processes with modern design sensibility. This public-facing project demonstrates how heritage crafts can be recontextualised for premium interiors, attracting collectors and designers seeking pieces with cultural significance and contemporary relevance.

Vikram Goyal: Brass-Centric Sculptural Furniture

Vikram Goyal
Vikram Goyal is a master at brass creations. Image: Vikram Goyal.

Vikram Goyal — an Indian designer — is rethinking brass as a structural element for furniture and interiors. His creations — which are frequently consoles, chandeliers and screens — use repoussé and deep metalworking techniques to achieve scale and presence.

Olive side table by Vikram Goyal. Image: Vikram Goyal.
Olive side table by Vikram Goyal. Image: Vikram Goyal.

Goyal’s work reinterprets old metal craft through a modern lens, resulting in pieces that feel rooted in technique but fresh in form. For the premium interior customer, his work bridges the gap between rich metal surfaces and attentive craft execution, presenting brass as an expressive material rather than a decorative afterthought.

Let’s Pause: Spanish Craft Furniture Built On Slowness, Natural Materials And Human Hands

The Colibri weave pendant lights by Let's Pause. Image: maria algara photography.
The Colibri weave pendant lights by Let’s Pause. Image: maria algara photography.

Let’s Pause is a Barcelona-based Spanish furniture brand that sees design as a dialogue with nature and craftsmanship. It uses organic materials such as esparto grass, fique, palm fronds and poplar wood to create handcrafted furniture, lighting and accessories that do not require chem

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