Close Menu
  • Architecture
    • Tiny Living
    • Treehouse
    • Hotels
  • Furniture
  • Holiday
    • Christmas
    • Halloween
    • Thanksgiving
  • Interior
    • Bathroom
    • Kitchen
    • Lighting
  • Interview
  • Ideas
    • Home Decoration
    • Home Improvement
  • Lifestyle
    • Accessories
    • Appliances
    • Gardening
    • Food and Beverages
    • Outdoor
    • Pets
    • Smart Home
Pinterest Facebook Instagram YouTube X (Twitter) LinkedIn
Homecrux
  • Architecture
    • Tiny Living
    • Treehouse
    • Hotels
  • Furniture
  • Holiday
    • Christmas
    • Halloween
    • Thanksgiving
  • Interior
    • Bathroom
    • Kitchen
    • Lighting
  • Interview
  • Ideas
    • Home Decoration
    • Home Improvement
  • Lifestyle
    • Accessories
    • Appliances
    • Gardening
    • Food and Beverages
    • Outdoor
    • Pets
    • Smart Home
Homecrux
Home » Furniture » Crude Combines Factory-Made Furniture With Rescued Materials to Strip Waste Off Dining Chairs

Crude Combines Factory-Made Furniture With Rescued Materials to Strip Waste Off Dining Chairs

Seating wrapped in salvaged leather
Mahima SharmaBy Mahima SharmaJune 30, 20262 Mins Read
Pinterest Facebook WhatsApp Twitter LinkedIn Email
Skind collection by Crude
Image: Crude
Pinterest Facebook WhatsApp Twitter Email

The Skind collection, conceptualized by Copenhagen design studio Crude, was a standout project at 3daysofdesign 2026. Created by designers Sofie Winther and Charles Boyte, the project uses simple dining chairs to talk about a big issue: consumer waste and how we value everyday things. By mixing cheap factory-made furniture with old, rescued materials, the studio asks the design world to rethink what makes an item special.

The chairs have a unique, almost human look. The designers took generic dining chairs and covered them in old leather skins, salvaged from broken, thrown-away sofas. Instead of making the leather look perfect and neat, they stretched it over the chairs, creating an intentionally tight and uneven fit.

The chairs look as if they are wearing clothes that are slightly too big or awkward for them. The leather still shows all its old wrinkles, creases, and marks from its past life.

Beyond their appearance, the chairs tell a story about family and home life. The designers believe that the dining table is not just a place to eat, but a space filled with social rules and power dynamics. By wrapping identical, boring factory chairs in mismatched, historic leather, they break the rule that everything in a dining room must match perfectly. They replace strict corporate style with unique and personal stories.

Shown at a modern, industrial gallery called The Lab, Skind offered a great contrast to the high-tech, shiny materials seen at the festival. Crude showed that waste should not be thrown away, but treated as a valuable material full of history. Through this creative recycling, the studio proves that modern design can stop making new things constantly and instead focus on giving new life to old objects.

Skind collection by Crude
Image: Crude
Skind collection by Crude
Image: Crude

Follow Homecrux on Google News!

3daysofdesign chairs dining chairs
Add as a preferred source on Google
Share. Pinterest Facebook WhatsApp Twitter Email
Mahima Sharma
  • Website
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram

Mahima is a free-spirited woman who is exploring how to let her thoughts reach out to others. Her writings are all a part of her visions and beliefs. After studying business and economics for 5 years, she now has decided to explore her interests in how writings can influence and connect people. So here she is trying to pave her way to the readers through her words.

Related Posts
Rubber Tables
Rubber Tables Break From Conventional, Offer Fresh Material Approach to Living Room Furniture
By Mahima SharmaJune 30, 2026
Bulbous furniture at 3daysofdesign
Bulbous and Playful Lounge Chairs are Setting the Tone for 2026 Furniture Design
By Mahima SharmaJune 30, 2026
Mimi Sofa by Philippe Malouin for HAY is Borrows its Form From Pet Beds
Mimi Sofa by Philippe Malouin for HAY Borrows Its Low-Sitting Silhouette From Pet Beds
By Happy JastaJune 30, 2026
Everyday-Rituals-Emerged-as-the-New-Luxury-at-3daysofdesign-2026---homecrux
Everyday Rituals Emerged as New Luxury at 2026 3daysofdesign
By Happy JastaJune 28, 2026
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

The reCAPTCHA verification period has expired. Please reload the page.

Important Resources

✦ Window Design Ideas
✦ DIY Crafts by Homecrux
✦ Tiny House Design Ideas
✦ Bike Storage Ideas
✦ Chair Design Ideas
✦ Birdhouse Designs
✦ Cloud Lamps
✦ Cob Houses
✦ Concrete Planters
✦ Flower Vase Designs
✦ Live Edge Coffee Tables
✦ Best River Tables
✦ Oil Drum Furniture
✦ School Bus Conversions
✦ Modular Shelf Designs
✦ Tiny Houses On Wheels
✦ Best Treehouse Hotels
✦ Stunning Cliff Houses

About Us

Homecrux is an online magazine that advocates the authority of design. It allows readers to both discover and follow the most creative and interesting projects in the field of design, architecture and smart home technology.

With the aim of bringing creative and innovative designs from across the world to the fore, Homecrux believes in the power of design and the way it simplifies human lives.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube LinkedIn RSS

Important Links

About Us
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
Cookie Policy
Contact Us
Sitemap

© 2026 Homecrux | Powered by Flexinet Technologies

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.