Triple Dresser Dresser Antique Dresser Bedroom Furniture Wood Cabinets
 

Triple Dresser

A triple dresser is, as you might expect, a dresser with three rows of drawers stacked on top of each other. The 'triple' usually refers to three vertical rows of any number of drawers, side-by-side, but this is a generality and the configurations vary.

Triple dressers are usually about waist-high. Quite often the triple dresser is used in the living room as an extra piece of furniture you can use it to store your important papers, keep the phone and some other things on, or as a stand or table for decorative items. Sometimes its used for the television, with the drawers ideal to store dvd’s and such.
     Below: Triple dressers come in many shapes and sizes, from humble and simple shapes to large storage units. Antique triple dressers were often objects of art for the rich, and great effort was put into them by the craftsmen of the day.

Triple Dressers

Mostly, the triple dresser is an ideal piece of furniture for the bedroom, providing extra closet space and adding to the style of your bedroom. For every kind of decor there is a dresser to be found. If you like a cozy dark interior you could opt for a warm cherry-wood or a dark oak-wood triple dresser. Or maybe a nice light and sunny room with a mahogany dresser as a final touch, complimenting the rest of your furniture. Besides the color, the style of your dresser is important as well. An elegant dresser with ornate carvings and beautifully shaped handles will give your room a different look than a simple dresser with sleek clean lines.

A triple dresser is usually a large piece of furniture, though many small styles are also common, so it is used where you want to store a large amount of clothing and other items that do not need to be hung in a closet, and need a little more privacy than sitting on an open shelf. In a large triple dresser you'll find mostly underwear, jewelry, socks, tshirts, spare change and incidentals, and maybe some paperwork. It's a versatile piece and is usually used to hold 'everything' from clothes to junk drawers.