Furniture and objects—reimagined, crafted, and shared through collaboration.
Workdeco was founded to rethink how design is created, shared, and experienced.
Based in Sweden with global manufacturing partnerships, we collaborate with artists and designers worldwide to publish everyday objects as considered design—making good design part of more spaces, more often.
Familiar Forms to New Perspectives
We publish furniture and objects as good design—whether reimagining the familiar or introducing new perspectives. Some are rooted in familiar forms, others emerge from new perspectives—but all are shaped by creative authorship, material honesty, and manufacturing precision.
Whether it's a storage solution, a seat, or an object yet unnamed, each piece is designed to bring clarity, character, and enduring value to contemporary life.
Inspired by Forms That Shape Everyday Life
At Workdeco, we're inspired by the forms that shape everyday life—whether authored or anonymous, designed or simply inherited through use.
When we reinterpret, we don't always replace. Sometimes, we find clarity in what already exists. Other times, we challenge the familiar with a new perspective. This balance between continuity and reimagination defines our approach.
We unite authorship with accessibility, artistic vision with industrial capability—maintaining a grounded voice and collaborative spirit.
A Shared Act of Publishing
We partner with creators whose work brings new dimensions to functional objects.
Some emerge from industrial or furniture design traditions. Others arrive from fine art, illustration, or craft practices—many experiencing object design for the first time.
We embrace this diversity: infusing the functional with artistic perspective and opening design to fresh voices.
Whether reinterpreting archetypes, realizing our creative direction, or contributing original concepts, each collaborator brings a distinct viewpoint that becomes integral to the object's identity.
We believe in creative partnership, not hierarchy—viewing every project as a shared act of publishing design.