Furniture is never just furniture.
It is memory, ritual, inheritance. It is the quiet witness to revolutions and reunions, to grief and grace. A chair holds more than weight—it holds story.
In every curve and joint, there’s a question:
Who made this? Who was it made for? Whose body fits here, and whose doesn’t?
Design is not neutral.
It reflects the values of its time, the biases of its makers, the exclusions of its market. When we call something “timeless,” we must ask: Whose time? Whose taste? Whose tradition?
As a furniture designer, I’ve come to see each piece as a mirror—reflecting not just aesthetic choices, but cultural ones. A table is a gathering place shaped by ritual. A cabinet is a keeper of secrets, shaped by what a culture deems worth preserving. A rocking chair might cradle a child—or a movement.
This series, Carved by Culture, is my invitation to look deeper.
To see furniture not as commodity, but as community.
Not as décor, but as declaration.
We’ll explore joinery traditions from Japan and Ghana.
We’ll interrogate colonial aesthetics and the politics of taste.
We’ll talk about how furniture can be protest, poetry, and legacy.
Because in a world that’s burning, building matters.
And what we build—how we build—who we build for—is a political act.
Let’s begin.
Think of a piece of furniture in your life—your grandmother’s rocking chair, the kitchen table where stories were spilled, the stool carved by a friend.
What culture shaped it? What memory does it hold? What body was it built for
🔜 Next in the Series: “Global Joinery, Local Justice”

We’ll explore how traditional techniques from Japan, Ghana, and beyond are more than aesthetic—they’re acts of cultural survival. And how honoring them in modern design is a form of justice.
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