Glass&Steel and just ugly audio furniture


Glass&Steel and just ugly audio furniture. I'm writing not only because I am a lover of great music and audio gear but as a consumer and an apt owner. I live in the NYC area presently in a studio and by the end of this month I should be moving to a larger one bedroom. I have for years been so very turned off with not so much the quality of audio furniture, but with the very unattractive look of what looks like{I made it in the garage look}.Though I am single without a mouth piece hovering over me. I still enjoy attractive looking furniture with the use of marble and hard woods and that old world charm.Steel&Glass and oak furniture that looks stacked doesn't appeal to my eyes so I have avoided this look and stuck with beautiful and heavy furniture to show off the gear. I know this goes against the grain but I can't get myself to buy a rack that's is built to withstand a seismic tremor of 10 on the rector scale and needs a tire pump to activate. I ask how many of you Goners have done the same with using of heavy furniture. Or is it just me and my turn of the century taste that keeps me from the standard glass&steel and ugly rack look.
schipo

Showing 1 response by macdadtexas

I'm with you, stuff is UGLY. No reason you can't use some very nice furniture or have something made. I have been mulling replacing my temporary rack for the last 4 yrs!! I have worked with a metal shop to build a rack to hold thick pieces of granite. I need to finally go in and get the go ahead.

Excellent post, I think it's funny when you see a room on here with $150,000 in audio gear, and $500 in furniture, except for the $2000 isolation rack. It's just not that important to a lot of folks on here. If you worry about how your Wilson's/Clearaudio/ARC/VTL gear sounds, please get with a furniture maker in your area to make it look good too.

Well, unless your wife says you don't have to, then don't worry about it.