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| H Texas Magazine - March 2005 "Like a forbidden city, Tansu offers an escape from the bustle of city life. Add Japanese calm to the home with clean, simple furniture pieces and accessories, or stay a little longer for a two-hour workshop and learn origami." - p.36 H Texas Magazine readers voted Tansu as the top-notch shopping destination for international novelties. - p.32 |
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| "Look high. Look low. Open doors. Open drawers. Since its name means "cabinet" in Japanese, it's okay to snoop for Lotta Jansdotter mix-and-match stationary ($16), Dewey Howard's graphic note cards, and black-and-white framed fashion prints from the forties and fifties ($35). Get your goodies wrapped up origami-style with Japanese Chiyogami paper." (Found on page 76.) |
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| H Texas Magazine - October 2004 "Functional Asian design meets American Arts and Crafts Movement at Tansu, whose name is the Japanese word for a space-saving cabinet of drawers. Everything in this modern store is calming and simple. Sounds of water ripple from the floor-length drippng waterfall and the tiny stone ponds, creating the aura of a futuristic palace." |
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