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ARTS & LIVING columbian.com » Arts & Living  

Au revoir, TV armoires


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Local angle
Vancouver stores’ customers reflect national trend

By STEPHANIE RICE,
Columbian staff writer

The flat-screen fallout has definitely hit Vancouver furniture stores.

At Once & Again, a consignment store at 7811 N.E. St. Johns Road, small entertainment armoires are not welcome.

Owner Chris Wymer said she’ll still take larger armoires (with room for at least a 36-inch screen), figuring they might be attractive to flat-screen owners.

“And those aren’t even selling that well,” she said.

Narrow sofa tables with shelves, however, are enjoying reincarnations as television consoles because they have space for DVD players and other accessories, she said.

Likewise, customers at Main Street Trader (1916 Main St.) have zeroed in on buffet tables to serve as a home to their flat-screen TV. Even people who buy wall-mounted TVs realize they want to hide the cords and need a place to stash equipment, said Joe Morrison, who owns the store with his daughter.

Morrison said he often takes orders for a buffet base flanked by bookshelf towers, with a bridge piece spanning the shelves. That gives the feel of a large entertainment center without having the traditional tight space for the television, he said.

His daughter, Karen Watkins, said she still has female customers wanting armoires so they can close the doors when the TV is off, particularly when the TV is in their bedrooms.

At Koplan’s Home Furnishings, 1012 Washington St., owner Merle Koplan said most of their newer wall units do not have doors that close, a la the armoire look. Instead, people may opt for artistic screen savers on their TVs “so they have a pretty picture on the screen when the TV is off,” she said.

The newer units have a depth of 12 to 14 inches rather than 24 inches, built to accommodate flat screens.

She likened the flat-screen effect to what happened in the dawn of the home-computer age. Desks changed, she said, because designers knew people weren’t just setting typewriters on them anymore.

“The furniture industry is aware of the new technology,” Koplan said, “and it wants to stay relevant.”


McClatchy-Tribune

McClatchy-Tribune
Sunday, May 11, 2008
By MELISSA KOSSLER DUTTON, Associated Press writer

Kim Shaver’s not ready to eulogize the armoire.

“The demise of the armoire is greatly overstated,” says the spokeswoman for Hooker Furniture, which specializes in entertainment units. “It’s one of — if not the most — classic pieces of furniture. I don’t think it’s going to go away.”

She will concede, however, that the armoire’s got more competition for housing televisions than ever before, thanks to the growing popularity of flat-panel TVs. Hooker and other companies have responded by introducing different options for stowing flat-panel TVs and slowing production of armoires designed for TVs.

“No one is talking about putting their TV in an armoire anymore,” confirms Megan Pollack, a spokeswoman for the Consumer Electronics Association.

A drop in the price of plasma and liquid crystal display televisions has created record sales of the sets and affected the furniture market. Sales of flat-screen TVs are expected to top 25.9 million this year, according to the association, based in Arlington, Va. That’s 81 percent of the expected television purchases in 2008.

The new televisions are so popular that interior designers say they rarely work with any other style of TV.

Furniture makers have started producing hutches, consoles and shelving units designed to work with the new televisions. The sets’ slim design gives homeowners many more options.

“It allows the room to feel much larger,” said Richard Ott of DesignSourceCT in Hartford, Conn. “You don’t have this deep, full cabinet filling the room.”

Some customers opt to set the television on console cabinets, long buffet-like pieces with shelves or drawers. Others like putting them in a hutch, where the TV can be surrounded with shelves for displaying photos or knickknacks. To accommodate the flat screen’s shape, most of the new pieces are rectangular.

Ott has placed televisions in credenzas and bookcases for clients. He recently tucked one into a secretary desk behind fabric-lined, glass windows.

Advancements in technology also make it possible to store components for watching movies or recording programs in a cabinet across the room from the television, Ott said.

“It offers a lot of flexibility if you’re designing around the TV,” he added. Hooker recently launched a new piece of furniture designed to hold the companion equipment — but not the TV. The company’s “Fireside Piers” have adjustable shelves, ventilation and electrical outlets.

In its advertisements, the Martinsville, Va., company displays the units next to a fireplace, the television hung over the mantle.

The space above the fireplace is a prime location for the television, designers said. Many customers want to display the new televisions on the wall rather than hide them away in a piece of furniture, said Ott’s partner, Nancy Zwiener.

“They’re sleek. They’re almost an art object in themselves,” the designer said. “They’re almost a status symbol.”

The look of the new televisions does prompt people to leave them exposed, agreed Susan Schuyler Smith of Spectrum Interior Design in Vero Beach, Fla.

“It’s not like you’re trying to hide the big ugly box anymore,” she said. “People’s attitude toward TV has changed. They’re much more inclusive of televisions.”

She has helped clients incorporate a wall-mounted TV into a grouping with shelves. The approach offers a more finished look than just hanging the TV on the wall, Smith said.

“Just sticking it on the wall then it looks kind of lonely,” she said. “Housed with a cabinet underneath and bookcases on the side, it just becomes part of the accessories.”











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