Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Why Oak Bathroom Furniture is Ideal


There is no reason why oak furniture cannot be used in the bathroom. Oak is commonly thought of an antique wood that only looks at home in large stately homes or rustic farmhouses, but the reality is, oak looks fantastic in any type of room in any type of home. Even small modern bathrooms can benefit from some oak. It is a very low maintenance, hard wearing wood that doesn't suffer through everyday use or from getting wet. This article aims to explore why oak furniture is the most suitable type of wood to be used in the bathroom.


26 May 2011 - Swedish kitchen and bathroom furniture group Nobia AB (STO: NOBI) has started or planned measures to improve its run-rate operating profit by between SEK1bn and SEK1.3bn in a bid to achieve its 10% operating margin target by 2014.26 May 2011 - Swedish Nobia AB (STO: NOBI) will continue to reduce the number of plants and may close another four to five plants until 2013-2014, CEO Morten Falkenberg was quoted as saying before the opening of the company's capital markets day on Thursday.When it comes to furniture for the home, oak is the perfect material to use. Whether it is Hereford furniture for the bedroom, Tokyo furniture for the sitting room, or oak bathroom furniture, it is low maintenance, elegant and extremely durable. It will not need replacing during your lifetime. Although the initial costs may be higher than with alternative timbers, its durability well makes up for this.These initiatives, which are expected to improve the margin by 6-8 percentage points, will entail one-off costs of SEK600m-800m until 2014, the company said today.

When it comes to furniture for the home, oak is the perfect material to use. Whether it is Hereford furniture for the bedroom, Tokyo furniture for the sitting room, or oak bathroom furniture, it is low maintenance, elegant and extremely durable. It will not need replacing during your lifetime. Although the initial costs may be higher than with alternative timbers, its durability well makes up for this.




Author: Kathryn Dawson


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