Lucky Strike
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- Messages
- 387
- Location
- Ultima Thule
Yeah, I can see how a person could get used to the new place.
I like the idea of the corner sofa defining the area around the fireplace. I'm thinking a credenza (or something akin to one, maybe) against the wall where the previous occupants' sofa was?
Yes! It's either that, or we'll put the corner sofa in storage and get another sofa for that "niche" in the wall. I'm dreaming of a Josef Hoffmann "Kubus" sofa, but they cost something like $12K...
And then I'd probably want the armchair too:
It would never occur to many people (most, probably) to put molded-plywood chairs with chrome-plated steel legs with a 300-year-old table, but it certainly works for me.
It's a very Norwegian thing! I haven't really seen that look outside Norway, but it's not uncommon here. It's been described here as almost a "designer cliché" - that is, mixing an old, rustic refectory-type table with modernist chairs has been a "daring" feature among the interior designer set here for a couple of decades now - at present, it's a bit "played out" as a trend.
The Prime Minister's wife even put her foot slightly in it last year, when she said something like "Evvvvvvveryone I know has that damn huge farmhouse table and the modernist Danish chairs...Norwegian interior design is boring..."
Explanation: Norway has very little to offer in the way of up-market, polished, continental furniture, - it's historically one of the poorest countries in Europe. What is on offer, however, is a very rich rural or "folk" culture, and Norway is probably the only country in Europe where "folk" antiques have price levels approaching the US "folk" market.
Our table was cheap, as it isn't identifiably Norwegian. That is, it probably is, since it's here and all, but the type can be found all over Northern Europe.