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Saturday, May 22, 2010

The TV Table Basics

TV tables are a big factor in any home setting. Aside from serving the function of being the supporting mechanism for the television set, it also allows the television to blend aesthetically to the overall room design. But then, how does one actually choose the right kind? This article will deal with that particular question. We will be enumerating the most important criteria used when selecting which design is most appropriate for every situation.

TV sets of ages past were usually bulky because of cathode ray picture tubes. Nowadays, technology has eliminated the need for these gigantic contraptions to make a TV work. Plasma and LCD technologies have gradually overturned the dominance of their gigantic ancestors. Because TV’s using this new technology tend to be much lighter, some of them can now be mounted on walls, and on extreme cases, ceilings. Hence, if one can mount a new TV on a wall, then why shouldn’t he?

The types of furniture around the room should be a factor. Of course, no one would want a delicately and exquisitely decorated room look less dignified than it should have been just because the new member of the house looks totally different from them. Hence, choose a table with a color scheme which matches the room’s design. It does not necessarily mean that it has to be of the same color, but at the least the colors and design of the new piece of furniture will not cause any form of disharmony.

It is important to gauge the durability of the material from which it is made. Typically, veneered plywood tables are the cheapest, but they are not very durable, susceptible to termite and moisture damage. Steel tables are very durable, but are too expensive and hard to coordinate, since it normally works only with postmodern, minimalist or to some extent, art deco room motifs. Going back, the bottom line is that a balance between aesthetics, functionality and affordability should always be considered.

Buying tables for TVs is not a simple task. As they say, a single rotten tomato can spoil one whole barrel.

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