The table that you use in your home as a dining table can come in a variety of shapes, sizes, and finishes that will all combine to complement your décor. For the best results, you should keep the design of the table simple, purchase one that is made by a master craftsman, and one that will serve your family well for many years. The most interesting and unique tables are crafted from materials that are salvaged and found in some of the most interesting locations ...
Sometimes it’s the details that really make the design. While some furniture pieces are defined by their clean, straight lines… others are characterized by their delicate edges and curves. “Curvy” furniture pieces have an undeniable aesthetic appeal, because even the most subtle arches can take a normal piece of furniture and give it an element of whimsy and uniqueness. The following 5 wood tables have chic, attention ...
Some great person rightly said, “History repeats itself” and that very well applies to trends, fashion, interiors, and style. With the upcoming retro back in fashion, people seem to be highly following the trend of the past. We can find the actors and actresses of today dressing up in style of old legendary celebrities. When we talk of fashion and trend, then how can we miss talking about the thing that add up real life to your living area and makes ...
Putting a little extra fun into dinner time and boardroom meetings, this four poster table uses its structure to suspend a central GEO lampshade and eight hanging chairs that sway playfully. This design creates an exceptionally divergent experience and aesthetic, creating a room within a room, with chairs that float around the table, it also makes vacuuming a breeze. ...
Coffee table. Hand-blown glass base in choice of colours. Metal top frame with round tabletop of painted crystal glass. Handcrafted. The “Bell Table” side table by Sebastian Herkner turns our perceptual habits on their head, using the lightweight, fragile material of glass as base for a metal top that seems to float above it. Hand-blown in the traditional manner using a wooden mould, the transparent tinted ...
I love this photograph. My friend, Emily Hague, took the picture. That, in the background, is the building that houses my studio/workshop. It’s a big, ugly old structure that was built in the late 1920′s on the foundations of an even older building that had burned down. It’s got 12-inch-thick solid concrete walls, lots of large windows with steel factory sash, and 11-foot-high ceilings. I would never call the place charming, but it’s definitely got ...