2025-11-17 15:20:25
Ida Torres

Remember the pure joy of stacking blocks as a kid? That satisfying click when you balanced a square on a circle, or the creative rush when you toppled everything and started fresh? Yellow Nose Studio remembers, and they’ve turned that childhood magic into furniture that actually makes sense for adults. Their INDERGARTEN collection is basically what happens when you let your inner five-year-old design chairs, and honestly, it’s brilliant.

The Berlin-based Taiwanese design duo behind Yellow Nose Studio did something clever with the name itself. They dropped the “K” from kindergarten, and in doing so, opened up a whole new way of thinking about design. It’s not just a cute play on words. It’s an invitation to approach furniture the same way we approached play: with curiosity, experimentation, and zero pretension.

Designer: Yellow Nose Studio

Here’s the concept in its simplest form. Take three basic wooden shapes: a circle, a square, and a rectangle. Stack them. Rotate them. Layer them differently. What you get is ten distinct variations that somehow look like they belong in a contemporary art gallery and your living room at the same time. The pieces function as seating objects and vases, all handcrafted from beech, cedar, and pine.

What makes this collection so fascinating is how the duo actually creates these pieces. They don’t just sketch ideas and hand them off to manufacturers. Each designer makes ten pieces, then they swap and literally deconstruct each other’s work, adding new elements until they both agree on the final ten designs. It’s collaborative in the truest sense, with every piece containing both perspectives. That back-and-forth, that willingness to take apart and rebuild, echoes exactly how kids play with blocks, and it’s what gives these pieces their unique energy.

The philosophy behind INDERGARTEN nods to Friedrich Froebel, who established the first kindergarten in 1840 with the radical idea that children learn best through play and hands-on experimentation. Yellow Nose Studio has taken that concept and applied it to their entire creative process. The result is furniture that feels both architectural and organic, structured yet playful. New geometries emerge from simple gestures, the same way a tower appears when you stack blocks one on top of another.

The collection made its debut and has since traveled to exhibitions, including “A Second Field” at Tokyo’s LICHT Gallery in 2025. The gallery’s director gave them total creative freedom, telling them to create whatever they wanted with no restrictions. That kind of trust speaks to how well this collection bridges the gap between functional design and art. These aren’t just chairs you sit on. They’re conversation pieces that challenge how we think about form, function, and the creative process itself.

In a design world that often takes itself too seriously, INDERGARTEN feels refreshing. The pieces are sophisticated without being stuffy, minimal without being cold, and playful without being childish. They prove that you can make something grown-up and refined while still channeling the experimental spirit of play. Whether you’re a design enthusiast, someone who appreciates contemporary craft, or just someone who wants furniture that makes people do a double-take, this collection delivers.

Yellow Nose Studio has even published a monographic book documenting the series, complete with stunning photography by Daniel Farò. The hardcover publication emphasizes the duo’s fluid practice between design, craft, art, and architecture, showing how blurry those boundaries can get when you’re working from a place of genuine curiosity. What’s next for INDERGARTEN? The designers hope curators will imagine these ideas evolving into bigger projects. They’re following the same playful, exploratory process to see where it leads. And if their wooden blocks have taught us anything, it’s that the best creations come from stacking, unstacking, and being willing to start over when the spirit moves you.

The post This Furniture Collection Was Designed By Your Inner 5-Year-Old first appeared on Yanko Design.

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