
Perfectly worn. We love Anthropologie's Truck Tarp Ottoman not despite its flaws, but because of them.

Perfectly worn. We love Anthropologie's Truck Tarp Ottoman not despite its flaws, but because of them.

Upholstered in canvas tarps "once used by Brazilian truckers to protect their cargos," each piece is individual and eco-friendly. We would love to see this piece used as a coffee table, and suspect it's the rare piece of white furniture that would be welcomed in a home with kids. After all, stains are just part of its character.
$998 at Anthropologie
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hm... really? almost $1000? i like the reuse of the material, but doesn't it defeat the purpose if they are just covering a NEW bench?
view meredith's profile
This is totally hilarious! I have a ton of ratty old furniture that I can sell for big bucks.
I like Anthropolgie but they must think their customers are complete fools.
view Palmetto's profile
I think if I had that in my living room, guests would ask what terrible things happened to that lovely bench.
view Julie's profile
I think it's pretty cool-looking, but I question the price and the eco-friendliness of carting tarps all the way from Brazil. Aren't there American truckers who have fabric to discard?
view mmadden's profile
I read somewhere (seriously don't remember where) that American youth (now adults I figure, since I read it more than 10 years ago) YEARN for a palpable past; hence vintage "designs" and imagery rely on a "faux" melancholic sense of style, and are so popular. From jeans they didn't rip or stain to furniture they've never used and looks raggedy, this generation is looking very hard to find a past that never existed and they'd like to relate to. There's no real history, just "faux-style".
And this is the epitome of that thought.
view Djluckyonline's profile
I love the vintage/thrift store look, but I wouldn't want that in my house. It's too ratty.
view NashvilleJen's profile
It looks like an old bench with the velvet ripped off exposing the inner fabric.
I could appreciate it if it were a genuine "found" item but when someone pays a grand for a mass produced piece that looks like this I don't get it.
I feel that way about a lot of Anthropologie stuff. I love the look of some of their pieces but I don't want anything in my place that I didn't find myself. Odd pieces should have stories behind them or what's the point?
view Slim's profile
yikes!
view fawn sf's profile
seriously?
view bluenude's profile
I might love this if I found it on the street, but I know what Anthropologie charges for furniture and you'd have to be out of your mind to buy this.
view Charlotte's profile
How can one company do some things so right and others so wrong?
view brittanykate's profile
uh yeah... perfect for those who want hobo furniture in my living room.
view Daily Nuance's profile
I meant in "their" living room... most definitely not in MINE!
view Daily Nuance's profile
Wait, what is Anthropologie doing right? Their clothes fall apart after 3 wearings and their furniture is crazy overpriced. That leaves their shoes - and they don't look all that comfortable.
view KristinaXI's profile
Are you sure you arent posting this as a joke?
view SleepyDweller's profile
i'm all for re-use, but honestly, this grosses me out.
view colellis's profile
What a joke!
view Julia at Living Luxely's profile
Perhaps "intentional fiasco" would cover this.
view kuroneko's profile
No pun intended, but it appears to have turned out that way!
view kuroneko's profile