4 Top Furniture Trends From the Spring 2021 High Point Market
New products built on recent trends with lots of black, striking details, polished rustic style and bold curves
High Point Market was back in full swing this week in North Carolina, with furniture and accessory makers presenting their latest products under the theme “Remix, Refresh, Reimagine.” Designers and manufacturers continued to build on trends of recent years, with products featuring organic materials, botanical prints and Art Deco inspirations. But the spring 2021 market also was marked by dramatic black artwork and furnishings, attention to details, a polished rustic sensibility and bold, whimsical curves. Here is a virtual look at some highlights. See if any of the furniture and accessories at the June 5-9 event inspire remixing, refreshening or reimagining in your own home.
This large woodcut-like piece has the organic look of tree rings, with a black-and-white palette that will bring compelling contrast to a room.
“Tree Rings II”: Angela Harris collection for Paragon
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“Tree Rings II”: Angela Harris collection for Paragon
Browse artwork for your home in the Houzz Shop
This piece in honed Negro Marquina marble can serve as sculpture as well as table. For those who want a lighter look, it’s also available in white marble.
Cubist table: Thomas Pheasant for McGuire
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Cubist table: Thomas Pheasant for McGuire
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This minimalist black console can add drama to an entryway, living room or dining room.
Hump console table: TOV Furniture
Hump console table: TOV Furniture
Black also featured prominently in patterns and mixed with other materials. This entertainment center from Hooker Furniture features black in a mix of mango wood and inlaid bone.
Caned furniture and details have been trending at recent markets, usually mixed with light-colored wood. But this year, makers featured caning mixed with black for a more dramatic contrast.
Sierra Noir desk: TOV Furniture
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Sierra Noir desk: TOV Furniture
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Like desks, bars got a lot more use in the home during the past year. This bar’s cabinet doors are a mix of black vellum and inset blackened brass circular details. The inside offers an elegant surprise with verre églomisé on the back, illuminated by LED lighting strips.
Gins drink cabinet: Julian Chichester
Gins drink cabinet: Julian Chichester
2. All About That Base
Sometimes a dining table base is just a dining table base that’s purely functional. But in 2021, eye-catching bases were all over the market.
Aqueducts and Brutalist architecture inspired the limestone-colored concrete base of this dining table from Casa Ispirata.
Sometimes a dining table base is just a dining table base that’s purely functional. But in 2021, eye-catching bases were all over the market.
Aqueducts and Brutalist architecture inspired the limestone-colored concrete base of this dining table from Casa Ispirata.
An hourglass was the inspiration for this table base by Paolo Vernier for Midj. The table’s name is Clessidra, Italian word for hourglass. The base is composed of two conical shapes and comes in solid or two-toned steel or in wood. The top is available in a crystal ceramic or wood finish.
This dining table is a great example of the table base trend and the trend toward polished rustic style. Hand-forged in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina, the table has an unexpected asymmetrical trio of metal legs that stand atop a tiered base. Woodworkers in the same factory hand-plane the top, which is available in maple or walnut.
Biscayne dining table: Charleston Forge
Biscayne dining table: Charleston Forge
3. Polished Rustic Style
Interest in handcrafted looks has grown, and furniture designers have responded with pieces that combine old-world craftsmanship with elegant and modern twists. The result, polished rustic style, sounds like an oxymoron but is a successful pairing of handmade elements with sophisticated and surprising details.
This piece, made in Mexico, has a beautifully crafted wood chest floating atop surprisingly funky legs. The metal legs are available in white, black, red or orange. The pulls are leather with an aluminum detail, and there’s a handy flip-up charging station inside.
Hygge Line bureau: Trra
Interest in handcrafted looks has grown, and furniture designers have responded with pieces that combine old-world craftsmanship with elegant and modern twists. The result, polished rustic style, sounds like an oxymoron but is a successful pairing of handmade elements with sophisticated and surprising details.
This piece, made in Mexico, has a beautifully crafted wood chest floating atop surprisingly funky legs. The metal legs are available in white, black, red or orange. The pulls are leather with an aluminum detail, and there’s a handy flip-up charging station inside.
Hygge Line bureau: Trra
With such high demand for home offices during the past year, it was interesting to see how furniture designers approached desk design. Furniture maker and designer Skylar Morgan wanted to bring the old-fashioned writing desk back in a modern way. This walnut desk has beautifully mitered corners and intricate joinery, with drawers handsomely accented in black belting leather.
Scribe desk: Skylar Morgan
Scribe desk: Skylar Morgan
Jeremy Kamiya designs and crafts furniture in a style he calls “modern craft.” To add to the challenge, he makes his solid wood furniture without nails, screws or stains. He crafted this piece using mortise and tenon joinery and finished it with hand-rubbed oil and wax.
Shelf of Drawers: Kamiya Furniture
Shelf of Drawers: Kamiya Furniture
This bunk bed looks like something a creative and talented carpenter might have worked up for their own kids. The light wood gives it an elevated and simple Scandinavian look, while its architectural sensibility adds the fun appeal of a fort.
Scandinavian House Bunk Bed: Sweedi Collection, South Shore Furniture
Scandinavian House Bunk Bed: Sweedi Collection, South Shore Furniture
Interior designer Lauren Clement of Lauren Nicole Designs recently teamed up with Charleston Forge to create a line of furniture. This console table mixes a hefty chunk of wood with equestrian-inspired hand-forged metal legs.
Paddock Chairside console: Charleston Forge
Paddock Chairside console: Charleston Forge
4. Bold Curves
After years of clean, straight lines dominating, curves have been making a comeback. Adding curves in a room will make it feel more welcoming and comfortable.
The styles of curvy sofas seen at the market ranged from amorphous to structured. The oak back of McGuire Furniture’s Kimono sofa falls into the structured category with its wood back, adorned with caning and oak blossom details.
After years of clean, straight lines dominating, curves have been making a comeback. Adding curves in a room will make it feel more welcoming and comfortable.
The styles of curvy sofas seen at the market ranged from amorphous to structured. The oak back of McGuire Furniture’s Kimono sofa falls into the structured category with its wood back, adorned with caning and oak blossom details.
Art Deco style continued to influence trends in updated ways. TOV Furniture’s Hump collection features furniture with strong curves that nod to Art Deco architecture but with chunky minimalist lines.
Hump nightstand: TOV Furniture
Hump nightstand: TOV Furniture
These soft, round swivel chairs are minimalist yet have loads of personality. They’re upholstered in bouclé, a textile that’s been trending for the past few years.
Lucas swivel chair: Urbia
Lucas swivel chair: Urbia
These curvaceous chairs are hefty, but at the same time their open backs give them a light feel. They also have a sexy 1970s sensibility.
Chairs: Cascade collection, Hooker Furniture
Chairs: Cascade collection, Hooker Furniture
The bench, coffee table and loveseat here have curves that add a dash of whimsy to a space. The asymmetry of the table and loveseat mark another trend seen this spring.
Furniture: 9 & 19
Furniture: 9 & 19
There’s an interesting play between the wooden base and the tall, curved silhouette of this woven outdoor chair.
Outdoor chair: JANUS et Cie
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Outdoor chair: JANUS et Cie
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Black was big at the market, following the trend of dark and moody rooms. One impactful way designers bring in dark tones is through artwork. While botanical prints in their natural colors had been trending at the past few markets, this year these prints were rendered in black, with strong contrast from creams and whites.
“Sedum I + II”: Susan Hable for Soicher-Marin