

Wood is the backbone of Scandinavian furniture design. Not as decoration, but as the primary structural and aesthetic material chosen for its grain, its warmth, its capacity to age into something more beautiful than it began. Carl Hansen & Søn, a Danish house with over 115 years of history, has built its entire identity around this relationship with wood. Working with oak, walnut, ash, beech, mahogany, and teak, the company uses nearly every part of what it sources, with remaining scraps repurposed as fuel. Up to 90% of the wood used in their furniture is FSC-certified.
Given the Scandinavian climate, the manipulation of nordic lights is not optional it’s essential. Scandinavian interiors are designed to maximise natural light during the day and create layered, intimate warmth at night. Windows are kept unobstructed. Walls are kept pale. Surfaces are chosen to reflect rather than absorb.
Louis Poulsen — the legendary Danish lighting brand — has been solving this problem since 1874. The famous PH lamp series, designed by architect Poul Henningsen, was specifically engineered so that no direct light source would ever be visible. The result is a soft, diffused glow that transforms a room rather than simply illuminating it. In Scandinavian interior design, the right pendant over a dining table is as important a design decision as the table itself.
The Alibaug experience centre showcasing Carl Hansen & Søn, PP Møbler, Fredericia, Audo Copenhagen, Louis Poulsen, and Design By Us exists precisely for this reason: to let you see these pieces in person, understand how they feel, and imagine how they live. A chair this carefully made deserves to be sat in before it’s chosen.
Oak is the wood most closely associated with Scandinavian furniture — prized for its durability, warmth, and the beautiful patina it develops over years of use. Beech is the second most common, particularly in Scandinavian chairs where steam bending is required to achieve curved forms. Ash, birch, and pine each have their place depending on the piece, the design brief, and the intended use.
The finest Scandinavian furniture is made from solid wood throughout all structural and visible components. This is a defining quality: solid wood joints hold differently to particleboard or MDF, move naturally with humidity changes, and can be repaired and refinished across a lifetime of use. Some pieces incorporate plywood in internal, non-structural elements where its stability is an advantage — but the frames and surfaces of genuine Scandinavian chairs and furniture are solid timber.
Oak is the most durable of the timbers commonly used in Scandinavian furniture — hard, stable, and resistant to the wear of daily use. Ash runs it close in terms of hardness and is the timber of choice for Scandinavian chairs where flexibility under dynamic load matters as much as surface durability. Both will outlast softer timbers significantly in high-use applications.
Yes — with the right finish and basic seasonal care. Solid hardwood Scandinavian furniture in oak, ash, or beech handles Indian climate conditions well. Oiled and soaped finishes are preferable to hard lacquers in humid climates, as they allow the wood to move naturally with seasonal humidity changes. Keep Scandinavian chairs and furniture out of prolonged direct sunlight, apply a light coat of appropriate wood oil once or twice a year in drier seasons, and wipe spills promptly. Well-made Scandinavian furniture in solid hardwood is built to standards that make it significantly more resilient than mass-market alternatives — and its joinery is designed to hold across a lifetime of use in any climate.
Experience it before you decide. Book a private viewing on +91 91680 47999 to our experience centre in Alibaug, where Carl Hansen & Søn, PP Møbler, Fredericia, Audo Copenhagen, Louis Poulsen, and Design By Us are all under one roof — available to sit in, touch, and live with for an afternoon. Forty five minutes from Mumbai, and worth every one of them.