ICFF 2025 highlights: 5 things we loved at the NYC furniture fair

ICFF 2025 highlights: 5 things we loved at the NYC furniture fair

New York Design Week might be winding down, but things at the festival’s marquee event, the International Contemporary Furniture Fair (ICFF), are just heating up. The trade fair, which takes over the Javits Center until 20 May, marks the largest showing of its kind in the U.S. More than 450 exhibitors from 35 countries show off the latest in furniture, lighting, materials and more for both the primary show and its sister presentation, WANTED, a showcase of American design that occupies about 20,000 square-feet of the already-sprawling exhibition floor. That’s quite a lot of ground quite literally to cover. But there were many stand-outs, including fresh approaches to sustainability and craft. Without further ado, here are five things that particularly caught our eye.

Virginia Sin’s new ceramic lighting

ICFF Sin ceramics

(Image credit: Courtesy SIN)

You’ll likely know Brooklyn-based ceramicist Virginia Sin for her playful, hand-built bowls, candelabras and vessels, but increasingly she’s been expanding her practice with lighting. At ICFF, she’s showing off her largest lighting assortment to-date with the introduction of two new collections, OBEL and STRIA. For Obel, Sin was inspired by the monumentality and history of Egyptian obelisks. The result is a series of table lamps with sculptural ceramic bases and gently tapered pyramid-shaped shades. But we were especially drawn to her STRIA collection of sconces, whose chubby interwoven forms have all the elegance of a Bottega Veneta bag. It was all about exploring ancient techniques, Sin says: ‘By translating those histories into light, the pieces become more than just functional—they hold space, carry meaning, and bring a sense of presence into the home or wherever they’re installed.’

Rockwell Group’s cork lamps for Stackabl

stackabl rockwell group icff

(Image credit: Patrick Biller)

Cork has been everywhere lately and no one has mined its potential quite as rigorously as Rockwell Group. In Milan, the design studio debuted Casa Cork, an entire pop-up devoted to this sustainable–and beautiful–material. The fascination continues with a new fixture Rockwell Group has launched in collaboration with the lighting company Stackabl. The company uses felt offcuts to create light fixtures that not only look cool (you can customize the colours to suit your space) but also addresses textile waste. Rockwell Group’s collab of lamps uses, you guessed it, a cork base with a blue, white and purple felt palette chosen by David Rockwell himself.

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