GLASSWORKS is a limited-edition collection of handles made from reclaimed, hand-cast architectural glass. Variations in colour, texture, and subtle traces from the glass’s previous use give each object a sense of history, reshaped into a contemporary expression.

About the collection

GLASSWORKS is available in several geometric forms and an earthy colour palette ranging from light yellow to deep orange, as well as a more muted green tone. Depending on shape and colour, the glass captures the light and filters it across the furniture it adorns.

Used together or individually, the handles add a distinct, artistic character to both furniture and space. They can be used to elevate existing pieces or to give new projects a clear and defined identity.

GLASSWORKS is a collection that is less about creating something new and more about allowing compelling materials to live on in a new form.

— Erik Wettervik
Head of Design, Superfront

The glass’s second life

The reclaimed glass originates from Lindshammars Glasbruk, one of Sweden’s most renowned glassworks. During the last century, this architectural glass was used in buildings shaped by post-war modernist architecture, in the form of thick, hand-cast blocks.

Each glass block has since been reworked into unique handles produced in a limited edition. By reusing existing material, the glass is given a new purpose and a new life - objects designed to endure over time, both in expression and quality.

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Lindshammars Glassworks

Lindshammars Glassworks has been part of Sweden’s glassmaking heritage since 1905. During the mid-20th century, the glassworks gained international recognition for its bold, colourful design language and hand-cast architectural glass - a distinctive material used in a number of significant public buildings.

Among the most iconic examples are the Church of the Revelation (Uppenbarelsekyrkan), often described as the Nordic region’s first ‘glass cathedral’, and the glass prisms created for the sculpture Crystal Vertical Accent at Sergels torg, a central public square in Stockholm.