Working from home in a mid-century modern office means sitting at a desk that is itself a piece of design — a slim walnut surface elevated on tapered legs, with nothing more than a brass lamp, a leather-bound notebook, and a ceramic cup on its surface. The mid-century ethos was that good design improves daily life, and nowhere is that more evident than in a workspace where you spend eight hours a day.
The desk faces a window or sits at an angle in the room, not shoved against a wall. Behind it, a wall-mounted shelving system in walnut and metal provides flexible storage — books on one shelf, files in a closed compartment, a sculptural object or plant on another. The system's open framework keeps the room feeling airy, unlike the heavy built-in cabinetry of a traditional study.
The chair matters enormously. A leather-upholstered swivel chair with mid-century proportions — low back, slim arms, five-star base — provides ergonomic support without sacrificing aesthetics. Finished in caramel or cognac leather, it ages beautifully. The overall effect is an office that inspires focus and creativity: warm, uncluttered, and designed with the same care as any other room in the house.























