Furniture is the collective term for movable objects, which may support the human body in its sitting position, provide storage or hold objects on horizontal surfaces above the ground. Storage furniture, which often makes use of doors, drawers, and shelves, is used to hold or contain smaller objects such as clothes, tools, books, and household goods. Furniture has been a part of human experience since the development of non-nomadic cultures. Evidence of furniture from antiquity survives in the form of paintings. The furniture of the middle Ages was usually heavy, made of oak, and ornamented with carved designs. Along with other arts, the Italian Renaissance of the fourteenth and the fifteenth century marked a rebirth in design of furniture. A similar explosion of design, and renaissance of culture in general, occurred in Northern Europe, starting in the fifteenth century. The seventeenth century, in both Southern and Northern Europe, was characterized by exceptional designs, and often gilded Baroque designs that frequently incorporated a profusion of vegetal and scrolling ornament. Starting in the eighteenth century, furniture designs began to develop more rapidly as a result of industrialization and mass production. Today,
Glass Furniture holds the greatest importance among all kinds of furniture.
Glass Furniture is used for different purposes, which range from home decoration to maintaining a comfortable and relaxing environment in office. Furniture was not usually classified as
Glass Furniture before the advent of the nineteenth century.
Glass Furniture can also be categorically described according to the place and space that accommodates it, such as drawing room furniture and corporate furniture. However, the most widely used type is decorative furniture.
Glass Furniture has multiple uses, which include comfort, decoration and relaxation.
Glass Furniture has vastly increased the horizon for furniture development, and different conceptual designs have been developed in the last century.