Authentic Danish pieces typically carry specific markings: a “Made in Denmark” brand stamp, a designer name stamp or paper label (often under the seat, inside a drawer, or on the underside of a table), and a workshop or manufacturer name such as Andreas Tuck, Fritz Hansen, Frem Rojle, France and Son, Sibast, Skovby, or Dyrlund. Construction tells include dovetailed drawer joints, solid hardwood cases, teak-over-pine backs, and distinctive Danish-style tapered legs. Marker-only Scandinavian pieces (Norwegian, Swedish, or Finnish) may also appear in Danish-style listings; we document country of origin separately on every listing where known.
Yes. Our Danish inventory includes lounge chairs, ottomans, settees, dining chairs, and bar stools alongside case goods (dressers, credenzas, dining tables). Named seating designers we carry include Hans Wegner for Andreas Tuck and PP Mobler (lounge chairs and Flag Halyard), Kofod Larsen for Selig (walnut and teak lounges), Kai Kristiansen, Folke Ohlsson for Dux, Erik Buch (bar stools), Ingmar Relling for Ekornes (Siesta lounges), Sigurd Ressell (Falcon chairs), Niels Koefoed Hornslet (dining chairs), and Niels Otto Moller (Model 75 and 78 dining chairs). If you are building out a complete Danish room, use the filters on this page to narrow by piece type, or contact us with your target configuration.
Yes. A significant portion of our Danish inventory is listed as matching dining sets (extending table with 4, 6, or 8 chairs from the same production run). Named producers include Niels Otto Moller (Model 75 and 78 chairs), Niels Koefoed Hornslet (Eva and Peter series), Hans Wegner for Andreas Tuck, Kai Kristiansen, and Hans Olsen for Frem Rojle. Matching Danish factory sets command a premium because the chair proportions, upholstery, and finish line up with the table. Use the filters on this page or contact us with your target party size.
Yes. Restoration is available on every Danish piece we sell, including wood refinishing, Danish paper-cord re-weaving on dining and lounge chair seats, cane replacement on chair backs and drawer fronts, leather conditioning or replacement, tambour-door repair, and hardware polishing. Restoration is entirely optional. Many buyers prefer the original paper-cord patina and leather wear on documented designer pieces from Hans Wegner, Arne Vodder, and Niels Otto Moller where originality affects collector value.