Furniture design is becoming increasingly ambitious.
From double-curved veneer and irregular structures to multi-material integration and complex surface finishing, furniture brands and designers are constantly pushing beyond traditional boundaries. Consumers see more expressive product forms, while manufacturers face a growing number of new production challenges.
These challenges do not always come from the market.
Sometimes, they come from a piece of material.
Sometimes, they come from a craft that is becoming harder to pass on.
Sometimes, they come from the increasingly difficult balance between quality, efficiency and cost.
As design continues to move forward, how should manufacturing respond?
This is the reason why CIFF Shanghai and WMF International Woodworking Fair jointly launched the Where Design Meets Manufacturing dialogue series.
In the past, conversations around furniture often focused on design style, material selection or market trends.
Yet behind every successful product is a series of manufacturing decisions.
Designers see curves. Engineers see machining paths. Brands see product expression. Factories see the balance between equipment capability, material behaviour and production efficiency.
As the furniture manufacturing industry continues to upgrade, more companies are realising that competitiveness is not defined by design alone.
The real challenge is turning design into products that can be manufactured consistently, efficiently and sustainably.
Therefore, Where Design Meets Manufacturing is not simply about discussing what makes a design attractive.
It asks a more practical question:
When design creates new requirements, what manufacturing problems must the industry solve?
In the first phase of this series, we invited furniture brands and manufacturers to share real challenges from their own production experience.
CARBINE: Can material boundaries be pushed further?
When thick veneer is applied to more complex curved furniture structures, traditional processes and existing equipment capabilities face new tests.
Some product structures that were once rare or even impractical are now challenging the physical limits of the material itself.
As design continues to move forward, can materials and manufacturing processes keep pace?
HC28 Maison: How can complex craftsmanship continue?
Many high-end furniture products still depend on experienced craftsmen to complete key production processes.
However, as generations shift within the industry, such experience is becoming increasingly scarce.
Ten years from now, when experienced craftsmen gradually leave the production floor, how will complex craftsmanship be carried forward?
Can intelligent manufacturing, automation equipment and digital technologies help preserve and translate this knowledge?
NEODIKO: How can quality and material yield be balanced?
For high-end solid wood furniture, material selection is always a critical part of production.
To ensure the final product quality and visual consistency, manufacturers often need to reject or downgrade part of the timber.
At the same time, raw material costs continue to rise, and material utilisation has become an increasingly important issue across the industry.
Can furniture manufacturers find a better balance between quality and production efficiency?
These questions may appear different, but they point to the same industry trend.
Furniture manufacturing is moving beyond single-machine upgrades and entering a stage of system-level coordination.
In the past, companies might have focused mainly on whether a machine was faster, more precise or more automated.
Today, manufacturers are asking broader questions:
As a result, manufacturing upgrades are no longer just about purchasing more advanced machinery.
They are becoming a comprehensive challenge involving materials, processes, software, automation, production management and human expertise.
Where Design Meets Manufacturing aims to create a new form of industry dialogue.
Furniture brands, designers and manufacturers raise real questions from product development and production practice.
Equipment manufacturers, material suppliers, technology experts and industry partners then explore possible responses through machinery, materials, automation, software and integrated manufacturing solutions.
Industry progress does not always come from a ready-made answer.
It often begins when the right question is asked.
In the coming features, this series will continue to share interviews with CARBINE, HC28 Maison, NEODIKO, MEXTRA, KBH and CHIC CASA, before moving into technology-side responses from equipment manufacturers and solution providers.
September 2026 will be a key sourcing window for international buyers looking at furniture, interior design, building decoration, woodworking machinery and furniture manufacturing solutions in China.
From September 5–8, 2026, WMF International Woodworking Fair will be held at the National Exhibition and Convention Center (Shanghai Hongqiao), alongside major industry events including CIFF (Shanghai), CBD–IBCTF (Shanghai) and Upholstery Tech Shanghai.
This creates a rare opportunity for overseas buyers to see the full industry chain in one trip: finished furniture, interior and building decoration trends, upholstery technology, furniture production equipment, woodworking machinery, materials, components, automation systems and smart factory solutions.
For furniture manufacturers, distributors, project buyers, designers and factory decision-makers, Shanghai in September is not only a place to visit exhibitions. It is a high-value sourcing and trend-discovery window where buyers can compare products, evaluate suppliers, study manufacturing trends and identify practical solutions for factory upgrading.
China’s furniture manufacturing ecosystem offers a strong combination of scale, engineering capability, production experience and cost efficiency. For overseas buyers seeking high-quality yet cost-effective woodworking machinery and furniture manufacturing solutions, Shanghai Hongqiao provides a concentrated platform to evaluate options side by side.
In this context, WMF plays a strategic role as the manufacturing and technology hub within the wider furniture and interior industry ecosystem. While CIFF (Shanghai) and CBD–IBCTF (Shanghai) present market trends, furniture brands, interior solutions and design directions, WMF brings buyers closer to the production technologies behind those products.
This is where international buyers can move from seeing what the market wants to understanding how those products can be manufactured more efficiently, more flexibly and more competitively.
From September 5–8, 2026, WMF International Woodworking Fair will take place at the National Exhibition and Convention Center (Shanghai Hongqiao).
As one of Asia’s leading trade fairs for furniture manufacturing technology and woodworking machinery, WMF brings together machinery manufacturers, automation providers, software developers, material suppliers and production experts from across the industry.
Whether the challenge involves material utilisation, curved furniture manufacturing, craftsmanship continuity, flexible production, intelligent automation, surface finishing, digital production management or smart factory integration, WMF provides a platform where buyers can explore practical solutions directly from technology providers.
International visitors attend WMF to discover cost-effective manufacturing solutions, evaluate production technologies, compare suppliers and identify new opportunities for factory upgrading and business growth.
Where design raises new challenges, manufacturing begins to respond.
Where Design Meets Manufacturing. See you in Shanghai.