86" Brown Leather Sofa with Tapered Dark Legs (XQ-1025-03) by Moe's Home Collection








86"W x 86"D x 29.9"H
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86" Brown Leather Sofa with Tapered Dark Legs (XQ-1025-03) by Moe's Home Collection








Brown Leather Sofa with Tapered Dark Legs | 86 Inch | Sofa
The legs are the decision. Four slender tapered posts in dark stained wood raise the leather form off the floor and give the piece its silhouette -- a clean horizontal leather body elevated above the ground plane with enough daylight beneath to read as genuinely light. That visual lift contradicts what leather at sofa scale usually does: adds weight and grounding. Here the material weight of the leather is held in tension with the structural lightness of the raised form, and the sofa reads as both substantial and considered.
The arms are low and tight -- narrow upholstered panels that terminate flush with the back height rather than rising above it. No wide padded surfaces, no rolled forms, no excess material. The back follows the same profile: a clean straight line across the full width, with a single horizontal seam line across the seat distinguishing the cushion from the base. The form is almost formally spare, and the warm cognac brown leather is what fills that restraint with material presence.
At 86 by 37 inches the sofa has a slightly shallow seat depth that reads as upright and purposeful rather than as a lounge piece. In a room where the sofa needs to read as furniture rather than disappear into relaxation, that proportion matters. The dark legs connect visually to dark flooring and dark tables; against warm floors they read as the sole accent note at the base of a warm leather form. Top grain leather means grain variation and a surface that earns its character over time.
- Dimensions: 86W x 37D x 29.9H inches
- Weight: 131.5 lbs
- 100% top grain leather upholstery -- solid red meranti and plywood frame -- high density foam
- Four tapered dark stained legs -- low flat arms -- tight upholstered form -- warm cognac brown leather
86"W x 86"D x 29.9"H


Meet the Maker
Moe's Home Collection:Forty Years of Furniture With a Point of View
Some brands earn trust loudly. Moe's has never needed to. The evidence shows up in rooms, season after season, in pieces that end up feeling more considered than their owners quite anticipated. More grounded. More alive.
That doesn't happen by accident. It happens because someone decided, a long time ago, that material and craft were worth the extra conversation, and never really stopped having it.
A Design House, Not a Furniture Factory
The Pieces Feel Found - Not Simply Bought

The Origin
A Family That BuiltSomething From Nothing
Moe Samieian Sr. arrived in Canada with an engineering degree and almost nowhere to use it. So he sold rugs at road shows, worked on commission, and learned the retail floor through years of direct customer contact.
In 1986 he opened his first store in Vancouver. Walking the trade shows, he kept noticing the same thing: most furniture looked identical. So he started hunting for pieces with something to say. Antiques. Flea-market finds. Objects with texture and history. More stores followed, and in 1999 he moved decisively into wholesale.
His children Sara and Moe Jr. carried that instinct forward. Not what merely sells. What resonates. That distinction still drives every collection.
The materials earn their place. Wood warms the edges. Stone steadies the eye. Steel adds tension. Glass lets the composition breathe. A hand-worked surface keeps a modern room from feeling too resolved.
The goal was never perfection. It was presence.
Moe's Is Built for PeopleWho Notice the Difference

The Craft
Material First - Trend Second
Every collection is designed in-house, then built through a manufacturing network developed over decades. Vietnam, India, Italy, Poland, Canada, the USA. Not the lowest-cost option in any of those places. Long-term makers who've been held to the same standards long enough that the standards stopped needing to be explained.
The construction is what you'd expect from that kind of relationship. Solid hardwood frames. High-density foam. Hardware that doesn't announce itself by failing early. These are not selling points so much as baseline expectations that a lot of furniture quietly fails to meet.
The materials go further than that. Acacia grain that no engineered surface comes close to replicating. Stone that grounds a room both visually and physically, which are different things and both matter. Mixed metals chosen for tension rather than coordination. FSC-certified wood and responsible sourcing throughout, though the more honest argument for it shows up over time, in how the pieces age rather than what the spec sheet says.
- Moe's does not source furniture. It curates it.
The Designer's Choice