
Every once in a while, a design comes along that makes you wonder why it didn’t exist sooner. Contour, by Budapest-based industrial designer Adam Miklosi, is exactly that kind of object. It’s a corkboard for your monitor, and no, I didn’t realize I needed one until I saw it.
The concept is straightforward. Contour attaches to an iMac and sits about 20mm behind the plane of the screen, creating a slim frame of natural cork that lives at the periphery of your display. It’s not trying to take over your desk or demand attention. It’s just quietly there, ready to hold a note, a reminder, a printed photo, or whatever small piece of the physical world you want to keep close while you work.
Designer: Adam Miklosi

I’ll admit my first reaction was mild skepticism. Sticky notes have been doing this job for decades, and they don’t require a dedicated product or any installation. But the more I thought about it, the more Contour started to make sense in a way that sticky notes never quite do. The problem with sticky notes on a monitor bezel is that you’re always fighting the format. The adhesive strip dictates placement, the neon yellow screams at you, and after a few days, they curl at the corners and look like your workstation gave up on itself. Contour eliminates the visual chaos without eliminating the function.
Miklosi frames the piece as more than just a note-holder. His description positions it as a monitor-mounted focus screen designed to create calmer, more personal workspaces. The idea is that the cork border, sitting just slightly behind your screen, helps block out ambient movement and background activity without fully closing you off from your environment. Whether you buy into that framing completely is up to you. I think calling it a focus screen might be stretching it, but the underlying instinct is worth taking seriously: the visual noise around a screen matters, and a warm ring of cork does read as quieter and more intentional than bare plastic or the aggressive glow of multiple open windows.

There’s also a material conversation happening here that deserves some attention. Cork has been having something of a design moment for a while now, showing up in furniture, accessories, and architectural applications as a sustainable, tactile alternative to synthetics. It’s warm, slightly textural, naturally antimicrobial, and it ages well. For a product designed to sit inches from your face for eight hours a day, those qualities aren’t trivial. Contour isn’t just a functional object. It’s a considered one, and the choice of cork over, say, plastic or silicone changes the feeling of the thing entirely.
Miklosi is producing Contour through Corkway, a B2B manufacturer specializing in cork objects that partners with designers as project-based fabricators or development partners. That kind of intentional, small-scale production relationship often shows up in the quality and specificity of the final object, and I’d expect Contour to carry that same sense of care.

Does it solve a problem most people would call urgent? Not exactly. Your desk isn’t going to fall apart without it. But design doesn’t always have to be emergency-level necessary to be worth caring about. Sometimes the best products are the ones that make a small, familiar friction disappear so quietly you barely notice the moment it’s gone. The sticky note that used to curl off your monitor bezel at 3pm is now a pinned index card on a clean strip of cork. That’s a minor upgrade, technically. But it’s the kind of minor upgrade that changes the texture of your day in ways that compound over time.
Contour sits at the intersection of analog and digital in a way that feels genuinely thoughtful. It’s not trying to replace your technology or make a statement about screens. It’s just making peace with the fact that some of us still need a little bit of physical, tactile space right next to all that glass and light.
