
Fluted Farmhouse Nightstand and Charging Hub That Softly Illuminates
A soft LEAD wakes the nightstand as you step into the room,the light skimming the fluted drawer fronts and warming the white-and-walnut finish in a way photos don’t capture. You notice the scale first — it sits almost level with a standard mattress, compact but with a reassuring visual weight that anchors the spot beside your bed. Run your hand along the grooved drawer faces and the ridges feel rounded,not sharp; the tabletop has a slight lip that makes a mug or phone feel contained rather than precarious. The piece labeled simply as the Fluted Night Stand with Charging Station quietly hides a charging hub and practical details,so they reveal themselves more than shout — a lived-in bedside presence rather than a staged prop.
at a glance what this fluted nightstand brings to your bedroom

Place it next to your bed and you’ll notice how it settles into the room: a modest footprint that often disappears behind pillows until you need it. The fluted fronts catch the light differently as you move around,so the surface looks a touch varied from one angle to the next. When you approach at night the built-in light tends to come on before you reach the drawer, casting a soft glow that makes rummaging feel automatic rather than intentional.
Daily interactions are quiet and practical. You’ll find yourself sliding a hand across the tabletop to steady a glass against the raised edge,or tucking a charging cable behind the back panel when you shift the stand a few inches. Drawers and the open shelf become the places you drop the small,habitual things — glasses,a book mid-read,a stray remote — and the fluted grooves sometimes gather a little dust that you swipe away without thinking. From sleepy reaches to last-minute bedside checks,the piece acts as a steady,slightly textured presence in the room rather than a loud focal point.
When you open the box and unpack the components

When you crack the outer tape and lift the lid,the first thing you notice is layering: thin foam sheets,plastic sleeves around the larger panels,and a cardboard tray holding small parts. You’ll generally set the biggest pieces flat on the floor — the tabletop, the two side panels, and a back panel — then move smaller pieces to one side. Many faces arrive with a clear protective film that you peel away as you work; you may find yourself smoothing it with your thumb or tugging at a corner to lift it free.
Near the center of the box there’s a labeled bag or two containing fasteners and a short tool: Allen keys, a few screws, cam connectors and wood dowels.The power module with its outlet, USB and type‑C ports is tucked in foam, its 6.6‑foot cord coiled beside it. The motion‑sensor LED assembly is either affixed to a panel or packed in a small plastic bag; a thin cable runs from it to the power module. An instruction booklet lies on top, and the panels themselves are stamped or stickered with letters so you can match parts to the steps.
| Item | Typical count |
|---|---|
| Tabletop and main panels | 3–4 |
| Drawer fronts/boxes | 2 |
| open shelf / slats | 1 |
| Power module (AC/USB/Type‑C) and cord | 1 |
| Motion‑sensor LED assembly | 1 |
| Hardware bag and small tools | 1–2 |
| Instruction manual | 1 |
As you lay everything out, parts labeled with matching letters make it simple to identify which pieces pair together; you’ll find yourself double‑checking stickers and nudging small hardware into one pile so nothing rolls away. the arrangement that works for you is usually to place the hardware closest to the instruction page and keep the panels in the order they’ll be assembled, which helps when a screw or clip seems to disappear into a corner.
How the fluted paneling, white and brown finish, and joinery are put together

Always follow the assembly instructions carefully. Use the provided tools, such as a screwdriver, to avoid injury. Keep the work area clear of debris and ensure stability of the furniture during assembly to prevent tipping or collapse.
When you handle the nightstand,the fluted paneling reads like a thin,attached skin rather than carved solid wood — the ridges sit on a substrate that aligns with the drawer face.As you bring a drawer into place you can see the fluting stop neatly at the edge where the drawer front meets the box; that narrow reveal and a small seam hide the mechanical fastenings and give the profile a continuous look.Running your hand along the grooves, you’ll notice tiny variations where the finish pools in the recesses or is slightly thinner on the ridge tops, which is normal as the paint or stain follows the contours during finishing.
The white and brown surfaces meet at simple junctions: the painted white carcass typically terminates against a brown‑toned top and drawer faces. Up close you can spot the meeting line — a faint overlap of paint or a narrow band of edge‑banding — and on occasion a slight texture change where the two materials were masked during finishing. While assembling, you’ll find yourself aligning those edges and tightening fasteners so the finishes sit flush; with a little handling the seams tend to settle and the color transition reads as a single plane from a short distance.
Joinery is mostly pragmatic and visible if you look inside. The main panels come together with dowels and cam‑lock fittings or similar knock‑down hardware so you slot pieces straight and then lock them down; the back panel is usually a thin sheet that slides into a groove and is held by small staples or screws. Drawer fronts are attached from behind with machine screws or bolts that draw the front tight to the drawer box, while the sliding action is provided by runners fixed to the sides. As you fasten these pieces you’ll notice the panels pull into alignment — occasional small gaps close up as the cam locks bite and the dowels seat — and the overall assembly gains rigidity the more you work around it.
| Area | How it’s typically joined |
|---|---|
| Carcass to side panels | Dowels + cam‑lock fittings (tighten to draw panels together) |
| Back panel | Slide‑in panel seated in a dado,secured with staples or screws |
| Drawer front to box | Screws/bolts from inside the drawer that pull the front flush |
What the drawers,shelf and top surface hold and how they operate

When you set things down, the top surface becomes the most immediate staging area: a lamp or alarm clock shares space with your phone as it charges, a cup that gets nudged when you reach for the light, and sometimes a paperback left face-down. Because the charging ports sit near the back, cords drape toward the rear and you’ll notice items tend to settle a little farther from the front edge. At night you frequently enough reach over and the motion-sensor lighting picks out objects on the tabletop and the shelf below,so small,low-contrast items become easier to find without switching on a room light.
The open shelf below the tabletop functions as a mid-level catchall. You slide magazines or a slim tablet into a horizontal stack, or tuck a small basket there to corral chargers and hair ties. Items on this shelf are easy to grab while seated, but can shift forward a little if you brush the table; in everyday use you’ll find yourself nudging things back into place. The two fluted drawers pull out to reveal private storage for things you don’t want on display — folded sleepwear, a TV remote, spare chargers, or notebooks. When you open a drawer you use the front edge to lever it out; the movement can feel slightly resistant at first and then settles into a steady slide, so you tend to close them with a small, deliberate push. Small, loose items frequently enough end up in the top drawer, while the lower one collects bulkier, softer pieces that shift when the drawer is opened or closed.
| Surface | Typical items you’ll place there | How it behaves in use |
|---|---|---|
| Top | Phone on charger, lamp, alarm clock, glass of water, book | Cords run to the rear; items tend to sit toward the middle-back; lit by sensor at night |
| Open shelf | Magazines, tablet, small basket, bedside essentials | Easy reach while seated; objects can shift forward when bumped |
| Drawers | Socks, pajamas, remotes, extra cables, small personal items | Pull out with a deliberate motion; top drawer holds smaller items, lower holds bulkier pieces |
Where the LED light and charging ports sit and how you will access them

as you approach the nightstand the built-in motion LED comes on without you having to fumble for a switch. the sensor and the light strip sit tucked beneath the top surface, aimed slightly forward, so the glow falls across the tabletop and the open middle shelf. In low light you’ll notice it activates as you step close and stays put while you set things down or reach into the shelf; moving around the bedside naturally shifts the pool of light a bit.
The charging cluster is mounted on the back panel inside the open shelf area, where cords can be plugged in without having to reach behind the unit. From your usual sitting or standing position you’ll reach into the shelf to access the two AC outlets, the pair of USB-A ports and the Type‑C port — the layout keeps cables contained at the rear and the power cord exits from a notch on the lower rear panel so it can run to a wall outlet (the cord runs several feet).If you slide the nightstand away from the wall you get a clearer view of the sockets; when it sits against the dresser or bed you usually reach in from the front.
| Feature | Where it sits & how you access it |
|---|---|
| Motion LED | Under the tabletop/front edge; activates as you approach and lights the top and shelf from the front |
| Power & data ports | Clustered on the back of the open middle shelf; you plug devices in from the shelf opening while cords route out the rear notch |
How it matches your bedside needs and the gaps you may encounter

At bedside, the piece often behaves like a compact workhorse: the top surface and shelf quickly become the habitual landing spots for a phone, glasses and the day’s last book, and the motion-activated LED ordinarily lights the immediate area just enough to reach for things without fumbling. Drawers glide into routine use for smaller items, though they can feel a bit shallow when larger bedside objects are nudged inside; reaching for somthing at the back of a drawer sometimes prompts a light shift of the unit to square it with the bed. Over time the surface accumulation of small items — chargers, a water glass, remotes — encourages a few unconscious adjustments: sliding things slightly toward the edge to clear room, or nudging the stand a few inches to align cords with an outlet.
Use patterns reveal a few modest trade-offs. The built-in charging cluster usually reduces nightly cord juggling,yet multiple devices plugged in at once can lead to a tangle behind the stand and a tendency to push the unit away from the wall for easier access. The open shelf is handy for a bedside pile of magazines, but bulky or tall objects can crowd the space and make retrieval awkward.The motion light tends to trigger reliably when moving in close, though it can also light briefly from someone passing nearby in a dim room, creating intermittent illumination rather than steady task light.
| Common bedside action | Observed behaviour |
|---|---|
| Setting phone/alarm on top | Top surface accommodates devices easily; multiple chargers can crowd the back edge |
| Grabbing items at night | LED sensor usually provides enough light for short reaches but is not a steady reading lamp |
| Storing personal items | Drawers hold small essentials well; larger objects may need to be placed on the open shelf |
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Measurements and placement notes to show how it sits next to your bed frame

The nightstand’s footprint and height are most apparent once it’s set beside a mattress. At roughly 21.6″ wide and 15.3″ deep, it sits compactly alongside a bedrail rather than projecting far into the walking space. With an overall height of about 23.6″, the tabletop frequently enough lines up near the mid‑rise of many mattress tops; it tends to be slightly lower than some pillow‑top or high‑profile mattresses and a touch taller than very low platform beds in most cases.
| Measurement | Value (approx.) |
|---|---|
| Width | 21.6″ |
| Depth | 15.3″ |
| Height | 23.6″ |
Placed flush against a headboard, the nightstand usually leaves a narrow gap behind for the power cord; the cord length permits sliding the unit a few inches away from the wall without losing access to outlets. When the case is set close to a bed frame with exposed side rails, drawer travel can feel unrestricted in most setups, though very bulky rails or narrow clearance between mattress and rail can limit full extension.items on the tabletop and the open shelf sit within easy reach when the top is near mattress level; with taller mattress profiles the surface can appear noticeably lower than the bedding plane.
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How It Lives in the space
Living with the Fluted Night Stand with Charging Station, Farmhouse Nightstand with LED Light, Modern Bedside Table End Table with storage shelf, 2 drawer Dresser with outlet, USB, Type-C Port, White&Brown feels less like an experiment than a quiet folding into your evening habits. You notice the lower shelf becoming the usual place for the book you return to, the drawers answering with a soft, familiar give, and the top gathering faint rings and the tiny marks of ordinary use. In daily routines it takes on a steady presence at the edge of the bed, an unassuming companion to coming and going. Over time you find it stays.
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