My Coffee Table Indirect From Japan
With Super Couch (oh, how I love it!) happily ensconced in my living room I needed to find a solution for a coffee table. Previously I had been using a Pottery Barn Chloe Coffee Table that I had picked up six years ago at a Pottery Barn Outlet for $60. Regular price it was $350 so it was quite a steal. Although it was a great coffee table the long narrow shape looked awkward with Super Couch. I needed something square or at least a very wide in order to fill up the space properly and look proportional to the sectional.
As I was contemplating what to do it dawned on me that the low table that I brought back from Japan might just work. I bought the table at a Recycle Center (a Japanese second hand shop for home goods) for ¥1000 (about $10 US at the time). The table is low because it is meant to be sat at with cushions on the floor. I loved how spacious the table top was and decided to set it up in my Japanese apartment as a work table for crafts. It worked out really well and I spent a lot of time working on projects sprawled out over the table.
I shipped the table back to the U.S. when I returned home but since then the table has languished in one of the back rooms of my house that I never really use. I rescued it from oblivion and placed it in front of the sectional. It was just the right size and fills the space nicely.
I love the curvy shape of the table legs and the grain pattern of the wood on the top. It really is a beautiful piece, especially for the great deal I got it for, and I am glad that I finally have a place for it in my home that showcases it better.
Temporarily on top I put a beige Marit table runner from Ikea that I already had. The tray is a hand carved wooden batea meant for tossing corn and rice that I picked up at a market in Panama this past summer. The two vases on the outside I bought in Seto, Japan and the one in the middle I made when I was a kid. I love how it is a little wonky, but not so bad for being in sixth grade, I think.
I plan to replace the items with something a little more colorful in the future, but for now it will do.
I'm really happy that the table works so well in the living room. Seeing it there when I walk in the front door brings back a lot of great memories from Japan and brightens my day. Now I just need to find a new rug and things will really be starting to come together...
Have you recently "shopped your home" and moved a piece of furniture or decor item to another room? What kind of coffee table do you have?
Reader Comments (5)
I like the coffee table. Your little pots / vases are a perfect accent, especially your own creation. They remind me of old ink pots. I have several pots I did in ceramics classes that I use for plants. Nice reminders of being creative. Thanks for explaining about the window frames. We had a similar problem with our baseboards and window frames - paint can hide so many things :)
Mary-Lou- Thank you! Your ceramic pots sound lovely. I have several that I have made but they are all little and too small for plants. I think that for now I am going to paint the walls and leave the trim and then see if I still want to paint them or if I can figure out another way to hide the flaws. Ask me tomorrow and I'll probably have another answer yet...
You'll be required to input your card information once you've reached the activation page. This usually contains your LL Bean Mastercard's digit card number, which is located on the front. To prevent any delays in the activation procedure, make sure you input the number precisely.
Activate.llbeanmastercard.com
You may fill out the Lowes store feedback survey online at www.lowes.com. You can proceed to finish the survey if you are aware of all the conditions and have met them.
Lowes.Com/Survey
Customer satisfaction surveys are a common way for Lowe's, a well-known home improvement shop in the US and Canada, to get input and enhance their offerings. Usually referred to as the "Lowe's Customer Satisfaction Survey," the Lowe's survey Lowe’s Survey