Why is Japandi furniture expensive?
Japandi furniture is expensive because the minimal look leaves nowhere to hide, so solid materials and precise craftsmanship have to carry the whole piece. A clean, low silhouette exposes every proportion, joint, and gap, which means the frame, the joinery, and the finish all have to be right, with no busy detail to cover a shortcut. The materials are the costly ones by definition: solid oak or walnut instead of veneered particleboard, real linen and wool instead of synthetics, and hand-oiled matte finishes that show the grain honestly. Visible joinery has to be clean enough to be a feature, and a drawer is expected to close smoothly, both of which take skilled work. The style's own ethos raises the stakes too, since buy fewer, better means each piece is meant to last and to be looked at closely. With Japandi there is nothing else to distract the eye, so you are paying for what you can see and feel.
AURA puts the spend where it shows. The japandi furniture collection we carry favors solid wood, honest joinery, and matte natural finishes, the details a quiet silhouette actually reveals.
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