Danish kitchen designers Reform recently released a collaborative collection of artful cabinet pulls and knobs as a compliment to their kitchens.
Based in Denmark, Japanese artist Yukari Hotta mades hand-thrown ceramic sculptures inspired by both Nordic and Japanese design.
Inspired by a collection of stones Hotta gathered along the Danish coast, the ceramic pulls are available in a range of sizes that can be easily combined.
A view of one of the handles in a Reform kitchen.
Living between Philadelphia and Detroit, Danish metal fabricator and welder Alberte Tranberg works with structural steel to build sculpture and furniture.
Rather than continuing the round profile of the tubular steel through a curve of the drawer handle, Tranberg flattens it at the 90-degree angle.
The result in a Reform kitchen has “organic, almost boney features” against a clean cabinet profile.
Furniture designer Maria Bruun graduated from The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen before founding her design studio.
Available at Reform are classic bent handles and knobs in tone-in-tone smoked oak and a contrasting natural and smoked oak.
The six options can be mixed and matched across size and material.
Hand-blown glass pulls and knobs from Copenhagen-based artist Nina Nørgaard who studied sculpted glass in Paris, Venice, and San Francisco before moving back to Copenhagen to pursue her craft.
A detail of the mouth-blown glass knobs and a brass base.