Having made a good or relatively good renovation, many people rush to arrange the furniture in a convenient or habitual way.
This is a personal matter for everyone. But in this regard, it is necessary to pay attention to individual elements that can in fact spoil all the efforts of the apartment owners.
Let's figure out what furniture should not be returned to its original place after renovation. It's not that the furniture may look somehow dull against the background of new walls, but in its very purpose.
This is the leader of the anti-rating. If it stands somewhere in the office or in the children's room, then it's not so bad. But otherwise, it is a real "fossil", especially if the owners have long ago purchased a compact laptop instead of a personal computer.
If the kitchen was renovated, then it's high time to take a corner bench to the dacha, especially if the kitchen is tiny. Not only because minimalism is in fashion now. Rather, such furniture steals a lot of useful space.
The fashion at the turn of the 90s and 2000s was strange. Only it remains unclear to the end - why do you need a pole in an apartment? You can stretch a rope and dry your laundry. But this element will not be able to surprise anyone.
Such upholstered furniture has a rather lush or bulky back, and there is much less seating space. It is unlikely to fit into a new interior.
This interior item became fashionable somehow imperceptibly and just as imperceptibly became unfashionable. "Gorki" tried to replace bulky Soviet wall units, but it didn't work out, and they have the same fate.
The legendary Soviet table-book crowns all this ugliness. You can iron your laundry on it, grow seedlings, and have somewhere to seat your guests. But time is inexorable.
Usually this element of the furniture is forlornly huddled somewhere in the corner. Chlorophytum blooms luxuriantly on it, and dust accumulates on the shelves. It is difficult to imagine what such a shelf is needed for, but it will definitely not decorate the interior after the renovation.