Estúdio Galho / Movew

Specialized in Furniture Design.

Estúdio Galho / Movew

About Estúdio Galho / Movew

Estudio Galho, based in João Pessoa, Paraíba, Brazil, has stood out in the market since 2018, designing furniture and accessories that elevate design as a form of national cultural expression. Rooted in Brazilian identity, the studio transforms concepts into pieces that tell stories, honoring traditions while embracing contemporary perspectives. Through design, Galho reinforces culture as an essential element of everyday life.

  • Winner of the A' Design Award.
  • Specialized in Furniture Design.
  • Original Design.
  • Creative, Diligent and Innovative.
  • All Designs
  • Furniture
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Interview with Estúdio Galho / Movew

Could you please tell us more about your art and design background? What made you become an artist/designer? Have you always wanted to be a designer?
Our journey began during our time in college, in the Industrial Design program at the Federal University of Campina Grande, where we were classmates. We believe there’s a certain similarity among all those inclined toward the creative field—an attentive and unique way of seeing the world. It wasn’t any different with the designers at our studio. We've always shared a love for drawing, the joy of exercising creativity, and a curiosity about the objects and surroundings around us. Although, in our youth, we didn’t have a clear understanding of exactly what we wanted to be, our profiles, as previously mentioned, naturally led us to Product Design.
Can you tell us more about your company / design studio?
Estúdio Galho was founded in 2018 in João Pessoa, the capital of Paraíba, by two partners and designers, Klivisson Campelo and Edson Martone, both passionate about design in all its dimensions. The studio’s mission is to highlight and celebrate Brazilian cultural richness. Minimalist and authentic design, combined with a focus on the semantic dimension of objects and their interaction with users, is deeply rooted in our product DNA. The creative process prioritizes conceptual maturation, resembling natural evolution that branches, sprouts, blossoms, and bears fruit, resulting in products that embody simplicity, beauty, and the awakening of memories.
What is "design" for you?
To us, design is experience transforming observation into form, sensation into function, and meaning into every detail. It is creating with purpose, connecting people, materials, and stories through objects.
What kinds of works do you like designing most?
We like to create products that go beyond function, that evoke emotions and emotional memories, that touch people in a sensitive and symbolic way.
What is your most favorite design, could you please tell more about it?
We couldn’t name just one. Generally, we’d say the products we developed at the beginning of the studio are our favorites, as they had a longer journey from concept to reality, some even developed while we were still in college. One example is the Badok lamp, which features a formal representation of the slingshot used by children in their childhood, evoking an emotional memory of simple yet striking experiences.
What was the first thing you designed for a company?
It was Burrego, a stand/magazine rack/bar that pays tribute to the donkey, an animal of great importance in the daily life and history of the sertanejo (inhabitants of Brazil’s countryside). The piece carries a symbolic translation, connecting tradition and contemporary functionality.
What is your favorite material / platform / technology?
We like natural materials like wood, leather, and stone, which carry unique stories and textures. We also value technologies that dialogue with craftsmanship, such as CNC combined with manual woodworking.
When do you feel the most creative?
When we are in contact with nature or close to water. These moments of reconnection help us refresh our ideas and activate our creative gaze.
Which aspects of a design do you focus more during designing?
The poetic translation of the reference and the psychological and emotional aspects of the object. We always ask: what can we extract from the inspiration to generate real meaning in the product?
What kind of emotions do you feel when you design?
We feel pleasure, joy, excitement, and a certain dose of creative anxiety, the kind that drives and thrills.
What kind of emotions do you feel when your designs are realized?
A joy that is hard to describe, especially when we see our products in people’s homes, creating experiences, memories, and emotional connections.
What makes a design successful?
When it harmoniously combines form, function, semantics, aesthetics, and sustainability, and touches people.
When judging a design as good or bad, which aspects do you consider first?
The experience it provides and the degree of innovation in how it communicates or solves something.
From your point of view, what are the responsibilities of a designer for society and environment?
It is our responsibility to design products that engage with industry in a conscious and sustainable way, proposing durable solutions that respect the environment and enhance people’s quality of life.
How do you think the "design field" is evolving? What is the future of design?
We are moving toward a design increasingly integrated with technology, but also more sensitive and connected to sustainability and emotions.
When was your last exhibition and where was it? And when do you want to hold your next exhibition?
At ISaloni in 2025, with a side table called Seringueira, a sensitive and poetic tribute to the rubber tree native to the Amazon, which embodies not only the strength of nature but also the memory of an essential chapter in Brazil’s economic and cultural history. It was exhibited at the Brazil stand through the major Brazilian Furniture/Design Brasil + Indústria project, promoted by @abimovel, in partnership with @apexbrasil.
Where does the design inspiration for your works come from? How do you feed your creativity? What are your sources of inspirations?
Our inspiration comes from Brazilian identity, nature, culture, and ancestry. We fuel our creativity by collecting visual, tactile, olfactory, and emotional memories, which we transform into physical form.
How would you describe your design style? What made you explore more this style and what are the main characteristics of your style? What's your approach to design?
Our style is contemporary-affective and subtly representative of Brazilian culture. We avoid the obvious or folkloric. It was born from our methodology: a sensitive translation of references and emotions into the physical world.
Where do you live? Do you feel the cultural heritage of your country affects your designs? What are the pros and cons during designing as a result of living in your country?
We live in João Pessoa (PB), in northeastern Brazil. Brazil’s cultural heritage is essential to what we do. Its natural and cultural diversity directly influences us, creating an aesthetic rich in narratives. Brazilian design is expanding, but it still needs to be recognized as a vital part of company culture.
How do you work with companies?
We work by licensing products. We develop authorial pieces with their own identity and then establish partnerships with companies interested in producing, distributing and commercialising these products. We believe that this model favours the valorisation of design, allowing the object to maintain its creative essence while adapting to the production and commercial needs of the industry.
What are your suggestions to companies for working with a designer? How can companies select a good designer?
It is essential to include the designer throughout the process, valuing their input and creative vision. A designer sees beyond the surface and contributes with differentiation, innovation, and purpose.
Can you talk a little about your design process?
Our process is based on listening, observation, research, and experimentation. We map references, build narratives, sketch by hand, model in 3D, and create prototypes until we reach the final result.
What are 5 of your favorite design items at home?
Juice Salif by Philippe Starck, The 9093 kettle by Michael Graves (Alessi), Eiffel by Charles and Ray Eames, iPod Shuffle Red Edition, and some of our own products.
Can you describe a day in your life?
The routine at Estúdio Galho involves a collaborative dynamic between two designers, marked by constant exchanges and focus on refining ideas. The day usually starts with an informal conversation about visual and conceptual references individually collected, followed by a joint analysis to identify relevant creative paths. Then, we dedicate time to adapting and improving already-generated concepts, seeking more precise and aligned solutions for the project’s purpose. Communication with partners and industry is also a key part of our day, ensuring design decisions align with technical possibilities and shared values. We also prepare presentation materials, caring for narrative, visual clarity, and aesthetic coherence to communicate proposals sensitively and strategically.
Could you please share some pearls of wisdom for young designers? What are your suggestions to young, up and coming designers?
Be curious, persistent, and sensitive. Create objects that deliver experiences, evoke memories, and create connections. Design doesn’t need to be just beautiful and functional, it can also move people.
From your perspective, what would you say are some positives and negatives of being a designer?
The positive is the opportunity to create with purpose and generate impact. The negative is often the undervaluation of creative work and the challenge of making the industry understand the value of design.
What skills are most important for a designer?
Sensitivity, listening, synthesis ability, visual communication, and cultural repertoire.
Which tools do you use during design? What is inside your toolbox? Such as software, application, hardware, books, sources of inspiration etc.?
Pencil, paper, 3D software (such as Rhino and Keyshot), visual references, books, and, above all, life experiences that feed our Brazilian soul.
Designing can sometimes be a really time consuming task, how do you manage your time?
Yes, it takes time. We're always designing, mentally or physically, but we divide the year into blocks, two months per semester are intensely dedicated to bringing projects to life.
How long does it take to design an object from beginning to end?
It depends. It can take from a week to a year, depending on the concept’s maturation and the product’s complexity.
What is the most frequently asked question to you, as a designer?
“What is design?” We keep asking because we believe it is always evolving.
What was your most important job experience?
The current moment, with our Design Studio, where we can experience both sides, as manufacturers and licensors. This has brought us maturity and a very refreshing path in terms of experience across both fronts.
Who are some of your clients?
Movew, Mestre Artesão, Desygn Móveis, Corbelli, ArteObjetos, Linee, Cabanna, Lovato, Vimme, Dibrianza, Asa Estofados, Karams, Toro Bianco, Alma, Tapetah, Tora Brasil, Marê Mobiliário, House Garden, Meridiano, Legfatto, Maná, among others.
What type of design work do you enjoy the most and why?
The kind that doesn’t just think about function but aims to awaken an additional experience.
What are your future plans? What is next for you?
We want to increasingly consolidate Estúdio Galho as a reference in Brazilian design, as well as expand national and international partnerships, exploring new languages, processes, and materials.
Do you work as a team, or do you develop your designs yourself?
Both options are part of our process. We develop our own designs, but teamwork is essential throughout development, from conceptualisation to completion. The exchange of ideas, views and experiences strengthens each project.
How can people contact you?
Through our Instagram: @estudiogalho Or via email: contato@estudiogalho.com.br
Any other things you would like to cover that have not been covered in these questions?
Just to thank you for initiatives that promote design so broadly and meaningfully. They strengthen the field and encourage us to keep creating with purpose.

Extended Interview with Estúdio Galho / Movew

Could you please tell us about your experience as a designer, artist, architect or creator?
We graduated from the Industrial Design course at the Federal University of Campina Grande in 2014. Shortly afterwards, we opened a design studio focused on branding services and the development of more industrial products, using processes such as molding, injection and 3D printing. At the same time, since college, we had been designing furniture with the aim of representing Brazilian characteristics with meaning. In 2018, we decided to create the brand and start our career as furniture designers. We began by producing our own pieces, but with the arrival of the pandemic and its instabilities, we migrated to the licensing model through industrial partners, a format we have followed to this day.
How did you become a designer?
We are motivated by design's ability to transform ideas into tangible experiences. Design allows us to tell stories, recover memories and create new interpretations of the reality around us. Becoming a designer was a choice that came naturally, driven by this desire to create with purpose.
What are your priorities, technique and style when designing?
We chose to be designers. It was a decision guided by our passion for creating, our curiosity to understand how things work and our desire to materialize ideas into meaningful objects.
Which emotions do you feel when designing?
We mainly design furniture and everyday objects, and we increasingly want to develop pieces that have a timeless dialog with the culture, territory and time in which we live. We believe in design as a tool for connecting people and contexts.
What particular aspects of your background shaped you as a designer?
They must study the world around them in depth, cultivate listening, curiosity and respect for the diversity of knowledge. They need to test, make mistakes, learn and, above all, understand that design is collective. And that a good career is built on consistency and sensitivity.
What is your growth path? What are your future plans? What is your dream design project?
A great designer can translate complex ideas into simple, original and meaningful solutions. They go beyond aesthetics, understanding the context, impact and transformative potential of what they are designing.
What are your advices to designers who are at the beginning of their career?
We consider good design to be design that plays its role intelligently, sensitively and responsibly, that considers the user experience, respects the cultural context and minimizes its environmental impact. It is in this convergence that design transcends the object and becomes language.
You are truly successful as a designer, what do you suggest to fellow designers, artists and architects?
Design improves quality of life. It can solve problems, optimize processes and arouse emotions. Investing in good design means investing in long-lasting, sustainable solutions that strengthen the identity of those who use it and those who produce it.
What is your day to day look like?
Designing more and more durable and timeless objects, in a sustainable way and with less impact on the production chain. This is our guiding principle. Each creation is born out of the desire to go beyond the practical function; they are objects that carry stories, symbols and affections. Estúdio Galho's DNA pulses with the integration of the natural and the sensitive, seeking forms that dialog with time, the user and the world we inhabit.
How do you keep up with latest design trends? To what extent do design trends matter?
A sensory refuge with a direct dialog with nature. A space where Estúdio Galho's products come to life, inviting visitors to interact, pause and immerse themselves. Everything is designed to reinforce the essence of the studio: poetic forms, cultural references and a balance between matter and memory.
How do you know if a product or project is well designed? How do you define good design?
Our secret ingredient is a deep dive into the essence of what we want to communicate. We believe that the more authentic and rooted the project, the more it connects with people.
How do you decide if your design is ready?
Many, from different lines, but we can mention Philippe Starck, Dieter Rams and Charles & Ray Eames.
What is your biggest design work?
Juice Salif by Phillipe Stark, The 9093 kettle by Michael Graves (alessi), Eiffel by Charles and Ray Eames. These are products that, each in their own way, explore the different levels of design. From the functional to the emotional.
Who is your favourite designer?
It's difficult to choose just one, but we would highlight the Velê armchair, which represents the mastery and lightness of navigation. It synthesizes form, functionality and metaphor in a visual and emotional balance. Mention should be made of the Genipabu Buffet, winner of the A'Design Awards and Competition, for the symbolic charge of an object with practical and aesthetic functions that are linked to the translation of scenery and elements of nature. As well as the Riso Armchair, which in formal terms seeks to translate a feeling of joy into lines reminiscent of a smile.
Would you tell us a bit about your lifestyle and culture?
It is essential to observe, draw, experiment and, above all, listen. Improvement requires constancy and humility. Participating in competitions, fairs, traveling and exchanging with people from the same and other areas has been fundamental in our journey.
Would you tell us more about your work culture and business philosophy?
It's an interesting question, but a little inconclusive on our part. Looking at our entire career, we can't identify any affinity with other specific areas. But I think that if we weren't designers, we'd still be in the creative field in some way.
What are your philanthropic contributions to society as a designer, artist and architect?
Design is the sensitive and functional translation of a context into form. It means building bridges between thinking and doing, between the symbolic and the practical. We can't just summarize design as a set of techniques and knowledge for solving demands. There is a very interesting book entitled “Existe design? - Indagações filosóficas em três vozes” (2013) - Marcos Beccari, Ivan Mizanzuk and Daniel B. Portugal, which says that, as a symbolic mediator, design ”articulates senses and meanings; acting as a form of mediation between the human and the world, between the material and the symbolic”
What positive experiences you had when you attend the A’ Design Award?
We have had many supporters along the way, but we would like to highlight our families, friends, teachers and partners, who have believed in us and encouraged us at decisive moments. Collaboration is a fundamental part of our journey.

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