At its simplest, furniture can be separated into three distinct categories: 1. Places to put yourself (seating). 2. Places to put your things (storage). And 3. Places to use your things (surfaces). In selecting which objects best serve these three needs, specifiers must very carefully consider not only their primary use, but also their individual as well as combined aesthetic. They must consider whether the piece of furniture spark joy, as Marie Kondo famously dictates, as well as how it functionally combines.
At its simplest, furniture can be separated into three distinct categories: 1. Places to put yourself (seating). 2. Places to put your things (storage). And 3. Places to use your things (surfaces). In selecting which objects best serve these three needs, specifiers must very carefully consider not only their primary use, but also their individual as well as combined aesthetic. They must consider whether the piece of furniture spark joy, as Marie Kondo famously dictates, as well as how it functionally combines.