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JustineBeck1 (トーク | 投稿記録) (ページの作成:「Furniture has been my bread and butter since the fifties. Around these West End streets, buying is about more than comfort. Designers with clients in tow, and they’re l…」) |
DylanCherry3 (トーク | 投稿記録) 細 |
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I’ve been in the trade man and boy [https://goelancer.com/question/wander-around-camden-lock-and-youll-spot-sofas-with-decades-of-life-theyre-marked-and-scarred-but-thats-the-point/ quirky chairs for living room] decades. Amongst the squares and crescents, customers aren’t simply shopping for wood and fabric. Young men with new flats, and they all ask for quality. A retro armchair, never fails to speak up. There was a velvet sofa that went to a townhouse in Chelsea, and ten years on it looked better than ever. That’s what vintage means. They flick through glossy catalogues, but at the end they admit.<br><br>Mass production doesn’t care, whereas vintage lasts. Taste splits by borough. Chelsea wants polish, with buttoned wingbacks. Brixton is bold, with retro mismatches. That’s the mix. I’ll tell you something else, a sofa becomes family. Glossy showrooms don’t sell that. I still walk my warehouse floors, and I know straight away. Vintage has truth. When a showroom tempts you, take a breath. Take on a classic wingback, and see how it shapes your home. | |||
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