Dark Wood Cd & Dvd Storage
The Dark Wood CD & DVD Storage selection is the ideal solution for someone has everything - on disc. A way to store all the discs in a neat attractive fashion that means you can find and retrieve whatever you're looking for. All of our CD & DVD Storage pieces are fully assembled and hand crafted from solid wood.Satisfy all of your home entertainment needs by adding one of our matching
Dark Wood Hi Fi and TV Cabinets to your order.
How dark is dark wood?
In the right setting dark wood furniture, especially dark wood CD + DVD Storage, can lend an air of prestige to a living room or study. But what exactly is dark wood furniture? Some regard dark wood as anything darker than the colour of white coffee, while to others it has to be almost black in colour. Certainly the earliest examples of dark wood furniture came about almost by accident, because at one time virtually all wooden furniture would have been light coloured.
The oak furniture from the Medieval Period that can be found on display in museums appears dark or very dark in colour but almost all of it would have been quite light in colour when it was first made because this is the natural colour of oak.
How time changes wooden furniture
The only sort of finish likely to have been available to protect early furniture from the damp or dirt would have been a coating of wax ‘polish.’ This might have been beeswax similar to that still in use today, or tallow made from animal fats. In either case it would not, by itself, have significantly darkened the colour of the wood. A practical demonstration of this can be staged by taking a piece of freshly seasoned oak wood and applying a coat, or even several coats, of wax. There will be no appreciable darkening in the colour of the wood. The biggest factor affecting the colour of this early or medieval furniture would have been the passage of time. Over the course of many years, wood will naturally mellow and darken in colour due to the effects of the environment. Add to this the centuries of dirt, smoke and soot and it is easy to understand how this would have resulted in the creation of dark wood furniture. Of course these effects, so alluringly described by antique dealers as patination, can actually be quite attractive and so the desire arose to try and reproduce this look, even resulting in dark wood CD + DVD Storage – which would originally have been extremely high-tech accessories in Tudor England. Dark wood furniture became particularly popular during Victorian times due to a revival of interest in the history of the middle ages, known as the Gothic revival. Victorian cabinet makers responded by manufacturing furniture from the same materials – mainly oak – and treating the completed furniture with a stain prior to varnishing, lacquering or waxing. But dark furniture was not all about ‘patinated’ oak however.
Since the 18th Century, furniture made with, or veneered with, mahogany had proved extremely popular. Today some 250 years later, the attractive mid to deep red-brown colouring of this tropical hardwood means it remains as popular as ever.These two influences: the ‘discovery’ of mahogany for furniture making by Britain during the Georgian period and then the Gothic Revival of the Victorian period, are chiefly responsible for the establishment of dark wood furniture as a distinct type or style.
Did you know?
Our DVD and CD storage units are the 21st Century equivalent of the bookcase. They offer a neat and elegant way of storing music, movies and games in keeping with the other furniture in the room. Whether you want CD & DVD storage in a country pine style living room, or disguised to fit into a retro-fashion bedroom, we have a storage unit to suit. There are small units for the storage of regularly used discs, to larger units holding 80 or more discs that are ideal for longer term storage. Many units are available in dark wood finishes, so if you see a style you like, check to see if it is available in a finish that matches your chosen colour scheme.The world of private musical and subsequently visual, entertainment has been a dynamic one for the past 100 years. First came the wax cylinder and then the gramaphone, then the wireless set and the television set. 78s gave way to 45s (ask your parents!) then the music cassette was rendered obsolete by the CD. Now it is the age of the ipod and MP3 player.