Upside Down 2 by Floris Wubben
Dutch designer Floris Wubben has created a second chair using his method of binding willow branches at they grow (see the first in our earlier story). More about Upside Down 2 by Floris Wubben
Dutch designer Floris Wubben has created a second chair using his method of binding willow branches at they grow (see the first in our earlier story). More about Upside Down 2 by Floris Wubben
Architect Carlos Barba of French studio AR+TE Architectes has completed this nursery school with an undulating roof in Saint-Nom-la-Bretèche, France. More about Le Petit Prince Nursery School by Carlos Barba
This wood panelled house and studio in Nacka, Sweden, is by Swedish studio In Praise of Shadows. More about Solbrinken Ordinary House by In Praise of Shadows
This house by Kazuya Morita Architecture Studio in Osaka Prefecture, Japan, is completely lined with with pine shelves to display the owners' extensive collection of books. More about Shelf-Pod by Kazuya Morita Architecture Studio
This wooden children's drawing case by Japanese designer Kana Nakanishi of Oiseau folds out to form a stool. More about Atelier Book Chair by Kana Nakanishi
Stockholm 2011: French designer Inga Sempé will present this ash chair and table for Swedish brand Gärsnäs at the Stockholm Furniture Fair in Sweden next week. More about Österlen by Inga Sempé for Gärsnäs
Slovakian designer Peter Jakubik has carved the rough shape of an iconic Panton Chair into a tree trunk with a chain saw. More about Hobby Panton chair by Peter Jakubik
This chair by Dutch designer Floris Wubben was made by binding and splinting the branches of a willow tree, forcing them to grow into four legs. More about Upside Down by Floris Wubben
Cologne 2011: Berlin designer Mark Braun presented a series of cylindrical plywood stools at imm cologne in Germany last week. More about Ton by Mark Braun
Irish studio dePaor Architects have inserted this oak grid-shell structure into the café area of Dublin Airport's Terminal 2, which opened late last year. More about OAK bar by dePaor Architects
This multi-purpose sports hall by Parisian studio AP 5 Architects has shutters in the facade to open the lower part of the building. More about La Halle du Robin by AP 5 Architects
Still not sure what to do with your left-over Christmas tree? Royal College of Art student Tom Hatfield has turned a few of them into a sledge. More about Christmas Tree Sledge by Tom Hatfield
Here's a frame made to display the wood waste generated during its own production, created by Japanese designer Hironobu Yamabe.
More about Short by Short by Hironobu Yamabe for E&Y
London designer Max Lamb has designed this self-assembly wooden chair for Tokyo furniture brand E&Y. More about Third by Max Lamb for E&Y
American designer Louie Rigano has created a range of teapots that combines mass-produced wooden handles and lids with individual hand-thrown bodies. More about Teapot/cup by Louie Rigano
Dutch graduate designer Carolien Laro has designed a range of stools with flexible seats created by cutting slits into their solid wood tops. More about Spring Wood by Carolien Laro
Tham & Videgård Arkitekter have completed this curving nursery school located between a forest and former industrial estate in Stockholm, Sweden. More about Tellus Nursery School by Tham & Videgård Arkitekter
Something a bit seasonal: designer Rolf Sachs has fused two sledges together to make a coffee table. More about Inserper-able by Rolf Sachs
French architects RDAI have completed this new Paris boutique for fashion brand Hermès inside a 1930s swimming pool building. More about Hermès Rive Gauche by RDAI
This wood-clad house perched on rocky terrain in Victoria, Australia, was designed by Australian practice Farnan Findlay Architects and features two separate volumes joined by a central walkway. More about Port Fairy House 2 by Farnan Findlay Architects