The Four Quarters are a set of four armchairs that are designed to nest within each other when placed horizontally, forming a pretty nifty wooden coffee table. Built from solid wood and upholstered with leather to give the seat its comfortable nature, Four Quarters is a shape-shifting furniture concept that lets you have a coffee table in your house, but also surreptitiously hides four extra chairs in your home for when you have guests coming over. All you need to do is add more grates… plus when you introduce colors, it moires beautifully to form the most complexly psychedelic pieces of art! The way the Grate works, you can have anything from a fancy magazine rack to a rather elaborate coffee table that can easily expand in size. Vasyl Maletych’s Grate Module can be used in a variety of ways, but at its heart, it is still one single L-shaped product. Sounds like one of those fancy designer quotes, but no, that’s pretty much what this project is about. One grilled L-Section is all it takes to make furniture. With a classic American walnut and brass aesthetic, the table’s form will appeal to most and allow it to blend in any interior style. The custom-crafted table features a wireless gaming system that connects with your smart TV for modern yet classic home gaming. It is inspired by the old-school gaming arcades and includes the big buttons as well as a joystick that is also a knob for the coffee table. Swedish designer Love Hulten has created a slim slide-out console with 2-player arcade joysticks & push-button gaming controls. There are six of them with dimmer switches hidden under the wood lip.Īn homage to retro gaming machines and furniture enthusiasts, this coffee table is one of its kind. For the idealistic ambiance in the evenings or even while throwing a Halloween-themed party, you just have to turn up the nixie tubes underneath. On top, there is the half-inch thick glass top which gives an eye-popping look inside the steam pressure gauges and valves that urge you to own it right away. Heavily inspired by the 19th-century industrial steam-powered machinery, this steampunk’ish coffee table by Minnesota-based Machine Age Lamps is dope! The coffee table has a rare, 100 years old Barnwood “salvaged from a Minessota USA barn” acting as the base section. Raja’s hinge placement allows the angled seating surface and backrest to become collinear, becoming a broad table with a split surface and a gap in between that’s wide enough to route your laptop and smartphone charging cables through! Made broadly from two wooden units hinged together at a single point, the Kagu folds up to either become a sturdy chair or collapses downward to turn into a table that sits just a little over a foot off the floor. Designed by India-based Viswak Raja, the Kagu solves multiple purposes in a single, simplistic design. Named after the Japanese word for furniture, the Kagu is a clever, versatile, foldable chair that folds down into a low, coffee table or a floor-sitting table. Flexible, thin, waterproof, and durable, it is an eccentric mixture of fabric and concrete. The secret to this table’s fluidity is Concrete Canvas, which is basically “concrete cloth on a roll”. Lightly skim coated with a smooth polish, the pigmented cement mortar of the table surface resonates Japanese-like minimalism. The coffee table is better suited as a stunning centerpiece. Reminiscent of a ribbon unfurling in the air, the curvaceous and wave-like form of the Whorl Table has an instant calming effect. It’s a beautiful table that manages to hide your daily mess! We like it for being modern and practical. You can place your decorative pieces on the main platform of the coffee table. The hidden storage unit within the coffee table provides extra space for your magazines, books, and other knick-knacks. It’s elegant and minimal but adds the functionality of storage. The ARC coffee table by designers Ditte Vad & Julie Begtrup is your perfect centerpiece.
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