Seven Handle Designers That Make a Sculptural Case for a Cabinet Refresh
Words by Simone Richardson · Updated on 07 Oct 2025 · Published on 07 Oct 2025
Spring light has a way of making us see our spaces differently. Suddenly, chipped paint or tired cabinetry feels more noticeable – and a refresh more tempting. But updates don’t always require major renovations. Sometimes it’s the smallest details that can transform a room.
Swapping out hardware is one of the simplest ways to add character. After all, sculptural forms and contrasting materials are often the first things you notice on entering a room. In Australia, a handful of makers and curators specialise in jewellery-like accents for cupboards and doors. Here are seven to know.
Bankston
Handles rarely get to have personality, but Bankston has made a habit of giving them one. The Australian label treats levers and pulls as design objects in their own right, often teaming up with architects and studios to push the category forward. Its latest collaboration, with Yasmine Ghoniem of Sydney design studio YSG, is among its most expressive yet.
Capsule collection The Streaks layers striped timbers – ash with blackbutt, walnut with red cedar – into bold banded patterns punctuated with patinated bronze. The silhouettes are playful, from star-shaped knobs to crescent-inspired fixtures, with names as spirited as the designs themselves: Kooky Streaker or Narcissist Cupboard Knob , to name a couple. More than hardware, each design is tactile, character-driven and immediately draws the eye.
Emily Gillis
Interior designer Emily Gillis usually works at the scale of whole homes, but her collaboration with sculptor and furniture maker Zachary Frankel distilled that vision into something much smaller: hardware. Together, they created a whimsical series of “breakfast handles” – flaky croissants and soft-boiled eggs cast in bronze at a family-run Melbourne foundry.
The pieces began as timber models before being hand-poured in sand moulds, leaving each with a subtly imperfect surface that adds character. Finished in distressed, blackened or natural bronze, they feel less like standard fittings and more like witty ornamental accents for doors, drawers or cabinets.
Studio Henry Wilson
Sydney designer Henry Wilson has a knack for letting materials speak. Since founding his studio in 2012, he’s built a body of work spanning furniture, lighting and hardware – always with a focus on utility, longevity and craft. Like all of Wilson’s designs, each handle embraces the art of handmaking – and the imperfections that come with it.
There’s the ’60s ski chalet-inspired handle with its broad flat face, the versatile ADT and Brute handles made for cabinetry, sliding doors or sash windows, and the Palais handle designed for lever doors. All are sand-cast in small batches, so no two pieces are identical. Subtle ripples, pitting and surface variations give each handle character, while the brass and aluminium finishes lightly oxidise into a lived-in patina.
ABI Interiors
Queensland-based ABI Interiors has built its reputation on refined fixtures that balance form and function. It was born out of a desire for more colourful accents to dot around the home, and while its hardware leans into tactile materials like travertine, marble, concrete and solid brass, it’s also a source of more vibrant styles that stand out.
Each collection has a distinct personality. Pedra knobs and pulls showcase the veining of natural stone. Atelis scales up the texture in cast concrete. Ziggy’s slim brass handles , with their curved profile, bring a playful edge. Though cohesive in style, the breadth of the offering means you’ll find pieces for indoors and outdoors, minimalist and maximalist aesthetics alike.
Trouthouse
Slow design is central to Trouthouse. Alongside architectural projects, the husband-and-wife duo behind the label handmake to order a series of zigzag-shaped pieces, including mirrors, floating shelves, incense burners and handles.
Chunky, tactile and sculptural, the stepped profile of the brand’s hardware works for single cupboards or as a repeated rhythm across kitchens and wardrobes. The studio experiments with locally sourced materials, injecting spaces with personality and pushing back against minimalist alternatives. Each design can be customised in shining gum or recycled blackwood, offering either warm honey or deep cocoa tones, and in varied lengths and widths.
Lo & Co
South Australian Lo & Co is a go-to for contemporary hardware. Its expansive range spans materials, finishes and forms, with influences from age-old architecture and design references. Case in point: the Orbe collection draws from antique bobbin furniture legs, while Prism references the sharp geometry of cut jewels and brutalist cues.
The latest release is the Pebble capsule , inspired by organic, stone-like shapes. Past versions of the design leant into muted, pared-back tones, but this one introduces deep burgundy and cornflower blue for a more dramatic pop of colour.
Spiggy
Spiggy curates artisanal hardware from around the world, often sourcing designs by leading international architects and designers and bringing them to local shores. Its collections are made up of jewellery-like fixtures that elevate a space beyond the furniture that fills it.
One standout is Spaces Within , designed in Sweden and handmade by artisans in Florence. It’s the work of Nadja Bari, who brings her fashion background from Chanel and Toteme, and award-winning designer Karin Wallenbeck. The 10-piece range shows off materials such as amber or dark brass and polished brass or nickel. Our personal favourites include the antique-inspired Prim pull , which resembles a bow, and the concave Tender knob with its elegant silhouette.
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About the author
Simone is Broadsheet's shopping editor.
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