|
Amorphous Furniture Design - The Wave of the Future
You've probably noticed that many late model furniture
pieces are no longer large and stately, as they were
in the past, and many models are not boxy and square
as much of the more contemporary styles have been. What
you have seen in the most recent furniture designs is
a detour from geometrically sound and symmetric design
and could be the wave of the future.
Amorphous design is a futuristic way to update the
look of your home. While it hasn't quite taken off as
the latest craze, it is only a matter of time before
people start chunking their boxy old couches and replacing
them with furniture that doesn't conform to any specific
shape. Let's look at some different types of amorphous
furniture and perhaps some influences into this new
style.
In the living room, you'll find the first attempts
at change to the new style. Couches are available in
not only nontraditional colors but also nontraditional
shapes. One of the most common is the "s"
curve, with some units more precisely conforming into
an "s", while others curve and swerve
around in a similar shape with no symmetry whatsoever.
The same is true of many shelving units. For example,
DVD and CD racks have been offered in the "s"
curve for awhile now, but newer units are coming out
in neo-modern zigzag designs and other configurations
that can't even be described by a known pattern.
Another trend in home design that is overtaking
traditional shapes is the "beanbag"
chair. Instead of populating a living room, den,
or game room with large, stationary pieces of furniture,
many people (especially young people in apartments or
furnishing their first homes) are opting for more mobile
implementations. The "love sack"
and other foam or bean filled bags have come a long
way from the small vinyl units of years before.
Some of these bags are the size of love seats and small
couches and can seat several people. Referred to
as "bags", these objects can take on
any shape and have no defined shape, and they are easily
portable so that you can choose any spot in the room
from which to watch television, play games, or share
a beer with a friend.
The influence of amorphous design may be from other
cultures where furniture is minimalized and portable.
For example, in Japanese culture, mattresses are on
the floor, and dining is traditionally held at a low
table (similar in height to an American coffee table),
with diners kneeling or sitting lotus style on pillows
on the floor. While these are not necessarily of
the shape that in influencing the neo-modern design,
it is the portability and lack of need for large
furniture pieces that carries over. The lack of shape
may be influenced by modern and abstract art, where
you are giving an amorphous object and expected to find
the image that was intended. The same may be true of
the new furniture trends, or the wave of the future
may simply be based on a need for a change of scenery!
Author: Ben Weissman
Ben Weissman writes articles about using Metal Beds
and Discount Bedroom Furniture to Design Your Home.
You'll find more Decorating Ideas at http://www.Home-and-Bedroom.com
. Make your bedroom into a personal retreat!
Keywords :fashion bed group, hillsdale furniture,
discount metal beds, wrought iron beds, affordable bedroom
furniture
Content Provided By : SubmitYOURArticle.com
|