The International Contemporary Furniture Fair (ICFF) 2026 has become a shining platform for emerging designers. From lighting to furniture, the fair was pretty much a sum of it all. The furniture trends shifted away from loud, spectacle-driven aesthetics toward material authenticity, quiet permanence, and hyper-focused craftsmanship.

The pivot toward material honesty and slow design was anchored by several independent design studios. These five standout furniture pieces perfectly exemplify the return to raw craftsmanship, showcasing thick, solid timbers, heavy hand-carved textures, and unrefined organic structures.

Material Studies II Coffee Table

Designed by Los Angeles-based Kalon Studios, the coffee table treats premium, sustainable timber not as raw material to be over-machined, but as a living canvas. It emphasizes monolithic blocks of wood with rich, tactile grains and soft oil finishes that prioritize the raw touch of the tree.

As Kalon approaches two decades as an independent studio, Material Studies II marks a decisive expansion of our material language. Long associated with reductive forms in wood, the collection explores how our studio’s disciplined approach can hold richer, more expressive materials while remaining unmistakably Kalon

– Kalon Studios

Image: Kalon Studios

ELLIOT Dining Table

The studio is celebrated for a hyper-physical, sculptural approach to lumber, treating massive fallen trees with intense hand-shaping and carved detailing. The Elliot dining table acts as a structural anchor, moving away from hyper-polished modernism. Its thick top and heavily worked understructure highlight the irregular beauty and density of dark, natural wood grains.

Image: Ian Love Design

Ati Stool

This studio relies on heritage joinery and high-tactility forms, focusing on dense, durable seating that feels anchored to the ground. The Ati Stool stands out for its rough-hewn, artisanal charm. The stool celebrates the natural imperfections of the wood, utilizing hand-carved facets that showcase a deep respect for manual tools over CNC precision cutting.

The Ati stool is inspired by my West African heritage. You’ll find that African culture is full of liveliness and warmth. The Ati stool incorporates hand-carving with generous curves and expressive forms. The art tool brings life and warmth to spaces, just like West African culture

– Kwado Som-Pimpong

Image: Crafted Glory

BLOCK Side Table No.1

Design studio 9&19 works extensively with geometric minimalism, allowing the pure, unvarnished weight of the material to define the object. The BLOCK Side Table No.1 is a masterclass in mass and texture. Built out of thick, heavy wood slabs, the table features raw, un-manipulated edges and an oil-rubbed surface that shifts the emphasis from superficial decoration back to the weight and permanence of raw timber.

Image: 9&19

Trio Nero Coffee Tables

A cross-continental collaboration that marries dark, moody tones with structural heft, pushing wood firing and heavy grain texturing to its creative limit. The Trio Nero tables embrace dark, deeply scorched, or heavily smoked finishes. The deep charcoal color accentuates the natural valleys and cracks within the wood, embodying a beautifully rugged, imperfect aesthetic.

Image: Henrique Real & Arboreal

The fair focused on the material’s rich and raw behaviors. Rather than cold minimalism, the floor favored hand-finished wood, natural stone, and heavy textiles that feel permanently grounded.

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