Manufacturer directory

Best private label home & living manufacturers

Find vetted private label home & living manufacturers on Wonnda. This broad category encompasses everything from home textiles and decor to candles, home fragrance, kitchenware, and tableware. Effective sourcing involves managing multiple manufacturers for diverse product types, ensuring a cohesive collection through consistent design and material choices. Key variables include material composition, finish, and the functional intent of each item. Lead times vary significantly depending on the manufacturing processes involved, such as textile weaving or ceramic firing.

Vetted suppliers
20,000+
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25,000+
EU-made
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Home & Living
SUPPLIER SHORTLIST FOR THIS CATEGORY

4+ Top private label home & living manufacturers

Wonnda works with the best private label home & living manufacturers. Here is a list of trusted suppliers from our network.

  1. Featured
    Panaka logo

    Panaka

    4.7
    Private LabelContract Manufacturing

    Switzerland-based manufacturer producing private label skincare serums, private label spf products, private label toothpaste, available to brands sourcing home & living.

    Country
    Switzerland
    MOQ
    Lead time
  2. Featured
    Epic Linen logo
    Private LabelContract Manufacturing

    Lithuania-based manufacturer producing linen pants (men's classic), stonewashed linen bedding sets, gauze linen fabric, available to brands sourcing home & living.

    Country
    Lithuania
    MOQ
    Lead time
  3. Featured
    Feu des Fleurs logo
    Private LabelContract Manufacturing

    Belgium-based manufacturer producing botanique candle, rain forest candle, golden hour candle, available to brands sourcing home & living.

    Country
    Belgium
    MOQ
    Lead time
  4. Featured
    West Bend Company logo
    Private LabelContract Manufacturing

    U.S.-based cookware contract manufacturer, private labeler, and OEM supplier since 1911. ISO 9001 certified. Made in Wisconsin.

    Country
    USA
    MOQ
    Lead time

Compare MOQs and lead times

Quick side-by-side of the shortlist. Missing values shown as a dash.

SupplierLocationTypesMOQLead time
PanakaSwitzerlandPL · CM
Epic LinenLithuaniaPL · CM
Feu des FleursBelgiumPL · CM
West Bend CompanyUSAPL · CM
What good looks like

Buyer criteria

  • Design coherence across categories

    A home collection succeeds when disparate items read as one range through shared palette, materials, and aesthetic. Verify the supplier or consolidator can hold a consistent look across candles, textiles, ceramics, and wood, which decorate and color differently. Ask for the full collection sampled together, since coherence cannot be judged item by item and is what makes the range feel intentional.

  • Per-category compliance

    The umbrella does not exempt items from their category standards: tableware needs food-contact compliance, textiles OEKO-TEX, wood FSC, candles CLP. Confirm each item carries the right documentation for your market. A supplier offering breadth must still prove compliance per item, since one non-compliant component, an unsafe glaze or an unlabeled candle, exposes the whole range.

  • Sourcing structure clarity

    Decide whether you want a consolidating partner managing breadth across categories or specialist suppliers per item, and confirm the chosen structure genuinely works. A consolidator must manage quality and timing across factories, not just forward orders. Specialist suppliers give depth but leave you coordinating the collection. Clarity on this structure shapes your whole program.

  • Per-item quality depth

    Breadth must not come at the cost of quality in any single category. Verify each item meets its own quality bar: burn performance for candles, stitch and fabric quality for textiles, glaze and structural integrity for ceramics. A supplier strong on coordination but weak on a specific category delivers a coherent-looking range with a failing item, which undermines the whole collection.

  • Convergent scheduling

    Because items come from different factories on different timelines, confirm production can be scheduled to converge for collection assembly rather than arriving piecemeal. Ask how the partner manages the slowest or highest-MOQ component, which sets the program timeline. Poor scheduling leaves you holding some items while waiting months for others, delaying the whole launch.

  • Transit protection for mixed fragility

    A home range mixes robust textiles with fragile ceramics and glass, so confirm packaging protects each item appropriately in transit. Damaged-on-arrival rates are high for unprotected fragile homeware. Ask how mixed-fragility shipments are packed and validated, since a beautiful collection that arrives with chipped ceramics or broken glass erodes margin and the brand experience.

Avoid these

Red flags

  • One supplier claiming excellence across all categories

    No single factory makes candles, textiles, ceramics, and wood goods to a high standard, since these are unrelated processes. A supplier claiming in-house excellence across the whole umbrella is silently subcontracting, which means inconsistent quality you cannot oversee. Ask which categories are made in-house and which are bought in, because hidden subcontracting undermines the per-item quality a home range depends on.

  • Compliance treated as optional under the umbrella

    A supplier who waves away per-item standards, food-contact for tableware, OEKO-TEX for textiles, CLP for candles, because the range is broad is exposing you to safety and labeling failures. The umbrella category does not exempt any item from its requirements. Treat vagueness on per-item compliance as a serious warning, since one non-compliant item can pull the whole collection.

  • Collection shown only item by item

    If a supplier will only present items individually rather than the full collection together, you cannot judge the design coherence that defines a home range. A coordinated look is the whole point of an umbrella collection. Reluctance to show the range assembled often hides color or material inconsistency across the categories made by different factories.

  • No plan for convergent delivery

    A supplier without a clear approach to scheduling production across factories so items arrive together signals coordination weakness. Items dribbling in over months delay your launch and strand inventory. If the partner cannot explain how they manage the slowest, highest-MOQ component that sets the timeline, the program risks chronic delays and an incomplete collection at launch.

How it's made

Manufacturing process

  1. 01

    Collection planning and category mapping

    The brand defines the home collection and maps each item to its production category and a suitable factory, since textiles, candles, ceramics, wood, and glass run in different plants. This mapping sets MOQs, lead times, and whether the program needs a consolidating partner or specialist suppliers per category. Planning the collection structure first prevents an incoherent, hard-to-manage range.

  2. 02

    Design language and material palette

    A shared design language is set, including color palette, materials, and aesthetic, so disparate items read as one collection. Material choices carry their own standards: OEKO-TEX for textiles, FSC for wood, food-contact grades for tableware. The unifying palette is defined before individual items are developed, since coherence across categories is what makes a home range feel intentional.

  3. 03

    Per-category development and sampling

    Each item is developed in its own category: candles poured and burn-tested, textiles cut and sewn, ceramics molded and glazed, wood cut and finished. Samples are produced against both the item's function and the shared design language. Cross-category color matching is checked here, since the same palette must read consistently across wax, fabric, ceramic, and wood.

  4. 04

    Per-category production

    Items are produced in their respective factories on their own timelines and processes. The brand or consolidator schedules runs so components converge for assembly into the collection rather than arriving piecemeal. Each category follows its own manufacturing route, so production management is about coordination across plants as much as quality within any one.

  5. 05

    Per-item compliance and quality control

    Each item is tested against its category's standards: food-contact compliance for tableware, OEKO-TEX for textiles, CLP for candles, structural and finish checks for decor. QC is item-specific rather than one generic check, since a candle fails differently from a cushion or a vase. Compliance documentation is gathered per item for the target market.

  6. 06

    Consolidation and collection assembly

    Items from multiple factories are consolidated, optionally bundled into sets or gift collections, and prepared as a coordinated range. Cross-item presentation is reviewed so the collection looks intentional together. Packaging is matched across items where the design language calls for it, and lot traceability is maintained per item for any quality follow-up.

  7. 07

    Packaging and retail preparation

    Items receive brand artwork, care and safety labeling appropriate to each category, barcodes, and retail or e-commerce packaging. Fragile items like ceramics and glass get protective packing validated for transit. The collection is prepared so each item arrives undamaged and the range presents coherently on shelf or in an unboxing.

Deep dive

Understanding home & living private-label manufacturing

Home and living private label is an umbrella category rather than a single product, spanning home textiles, candles and home fragrance, kitchenware and tableware, decor, and small homeware accessories. For a brand building a home range, the defining challenge is that these items are made by entirely different processes in different factories, so a coherent collection is a multi-supplier sourcing program held together by a consistent design language rather than a single production relationship. The first reality is process diversity. A scented candle is poured wax, a cushion cover is cut and sewn textile, a ceramic vase is molded and glazed, a wooden tray is cut and finished timber, and a glass tumbler is pressed or blown. Each sits in its own factory with its own MOQ, lead time, and quality language. A brand assembling a home collection is therefore coordinating across categories, either through a consolidating partner who can source breadth or by managing specialist suppliers per product type. The unifying threads are design coherence and material credibility. A home range succeeds when disparate items, a candle, a throw, a serving bowl, read as one collection through shared color palettes, materials, and a consistent aesthetic. Material and safety standards still apply per item: food-contact compliance for tableware, OEKO-TEX for textiles, FSC for wood, and CLP labeling for candles. The umbrella does not exempt any item from its category's specific requirements. Sourcing geography mirrors the category mix. China and wider Asia handle the broad range and lowest cost across most homeware, while European production in Portugal, Poland, Germany, and Italy serves textiles, ceramics, and craft-led items closer to market. MOQs and lead times vary by item, so a home collection has no single figure, and the program timeline is set by the slowest or highest-minimum component. Cost drivers differ per item but always include material grade, decoration or finish, tooling where needed, and volume. Private label home and living buyers are homeware retailers and concept stores, D2C lifestyle and interior brands, hospitality and short-stay furnishing programs, and gifting and subscription businesses. Differentiation runs on a clear design point of view, material quality, and coordinated collections. Qualifying suppliers on breadth or specialist depth, on per-item compliance, and on the ability to hold a consistent look across categories matters more than any single item's price, because a home range lives or dies on whether the collection feels intentional and the individual items each perform in their own category.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Can one supplier provide my whole home and living range?+
Rarely with genuine quality across the board, because home and living spans unrelated processes: candles are poured wax, textiles are cut and sewn, ceramics are molded and glazed, wood is cut and finished, glass is pressed or blown. A factory excellent at one is seldom excellent at all. You have two realistic structures. A consolidating partner or trading company sources breadth across factories and ships the collection as one program, which simplifies your contact point but requires that they genuinely manage quality and timing across plants rather than just forwarding orders. Alternatively, you manage specialist suppliers per category, gaining depth at the cost of coordinating the collection yourself. A supplier claiming in-house excellence across every category is usually subcontracting silently, so ask directly which items are made in-house and which are bought in.
How do I make a home collection feel coordinated when items come from different factories?+
Coherence comes from a deliberate, shared design language applied across every item: a consistent color palette, repeated materials, and a unified aesthetic that ties a candle, a throw, and a serving bowl into one collection. The hard part is that wax, fabric, ceramic, and wood take color differently, so the same palette can drift across substrates. Define the palette and material story before developing individual items, then check cross-category color matching at the sampling stage with the items viewed together rather than separately. Always review the full collection assembled before production, since coherence cannot be judged item by item. A consolidator who manages color and design across the range, or detailed brand guidelines enforced at each factory, is what keeps the collection reading as intentional rather than as a set of unrelated products.
Do umbrella home ranges still need per-item compliance?+
Yes, completely. The breadth of a home range does not exempt any item from its category's specific requirements. Tableware that touches food needs food-contact compliance covering migration and heavy-metal limits, including for ceramic glazes. Textiles benefit from OEKO-TEX certification for tested chemical safety. Wood items need FSC documentation for any sustainability claim. Candles require CLP labeling with fragrance allergen declarations in the EU. Each standard applies to its item regardless of the collection it sits in, and one non-compliant component, an unsafe glaze, an unlabeled candle, exposes your whole range to recall, rejection, or relabeling. When sourcing a broad collection, gather compliance documentation per item for your target market, and treat any supplier who waves away per-item standards because the range is large as a serious warning rather than a convenience.
What MOQ should I expect for a home collection?+
There is no single figure, because each category carries its own minimum: candles might start around 500 to 1,000 units per scent, textiles vary by item and construction, ceramics depend on whether new molds are needed, and decor items differ widely. This means a home collection's effective floor is set by its highest-MOQ component, which can force you to overstock one item to hit its minimum. Map each item's MOQ before finalizing the range so you understand which component drives the floor, then balance the collection, choosing items with compatible minimums or using existing stock shapes for some pieces, to avoid being locked into excess inventory on a single SKU. The program timeline works the same way: the slowest item sets the launch date, so identify it early and schedule the rest of the collection to converge around it.
Where should I source a home and living range?+
Geography follows the category mix. China and wider Asia handle the broadest range at the lowest cost across most homeware categories, from candles and ceramics to decor and textiles, with the deepest tooling and assembly infrastructure. European production in Portugal, Poland, Germany, and Italy serves textiles, ceramics, and craft-led items closer to market, suiting shorter runs, faster turnaround, and origin-led positioning. Many brands split sourcing, taking volume items from Asia and reserving European production for premium or craft pieces that carry a provenance story. The choice affects more than cost: European sourcing simplifies compliance documentation and shortens lead times, while Asian sourcing requires careful per-item verification of food-contact, textile, and safety standards through independent checks. A consolidating partner can bridge geographies, scheduling production across regions so items converge for collection assembly.
How do I handle the mix of fragile and durable items in one shipment?+
A home collection mixes robust items like textiles with fragile ones like ceramics and glass, and unprotected fragile homeware has high damage-on-arrival rates that erode margin quickly. Confirm with each supplier or your consolidator how mixed-fragility shipments are packed and that protective packaging for ceramics and glass has been validated against transit conditions, not just assumed. Fragile items need internal cushioning, corner protection, and outer cartons rated for the journey. When items from different factories are consolidated, the consolidation point should repack or verify protection rather than simply combining cartons. It is worth requesting a transit test or reviewing the packing specification for fragile items before a full run, since a beautiful collection that arrives with chipped vases or broken tumblers damages both your margin and the unboxing experience the range is meant to deliver.
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private label stevia manufacturers
ItalyGMPMOQ < 1k
BI
Biostevera S.L.
Spain · GMP, ISO 22000
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  • Castelló Stevia · Europe
  • So Pure Stevia · Europe
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Biostevera S.L.
B
Hi! We can offer Reb M-dominant stevia from 500kg MOQ.
Great. Can you send a sample to our DE address?
spec.pdf Sample request
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