
If you live in an apartment or a home with a narrow entryway, you know the struggle. Coats pile up on dining chairs. Umbrellas lean precariously against walls. Traditional coat racks with their sprawling arms take up precious floor space you simply don’t have. You need something that actually works without turning your entry into an obstacle course.
Enter The Bugle by Design by Joffey, a coat and umbrella stand that rethinks the entire concept by borrowing its form from an unlikely source: a brass musical instrument. This isn’t just clever design for the sake of being clever. It’s a genuinely smart solution to a problem that plagues anyone living in tight quarters.
Designer: Design by Joffey


The beauty of this piece is in its vertical footprint. Where most coat stands spread outward with multiple arms jutting in different directions, The Bugle stays contained within a slim, elegant silhouette. A single curved loop rises from a slender pole, mimicking the distinctive shape of a bugle, complete with a flared bell detail at the top. Everything sits on a simple circular base that keeps it stable without hogging floor space.

That curved loop is where the magic happens. It’s perfectly sized to drape a jacket or hang a scarf, while a smaller ring positioned within the larger curve holds umbrellas upright. Two storage solutions in one compact design, occupying roughly the same footprint as a single dining chair but infinitely more functional and better looking.

The proportions feel just right because they’re borrowed from something that was already thoughtfully designed. Musical instruments like bugles have curves that exist for acoustic and ergonomic reasons. Those shapes have been refined over centuries to feel balanced and purposeful. By translating that form into furniture, Joffey taps into proportions that our eyes instinctively recognize as harmonious.
What really sets The Bugle apart is its ability to be both functional and sculptural. In a small entryway, every object needs to pull double duty. This piece stores your essentials while also acting as a visual anchor that defines the space. The saturated periwinkle blue gives it presence without overwhelming the room. That matte finish adds a contemporary softness that works with almost any decorating style, from Scandinavian minimalism to eclectic maximalism.

There’s something playful about the design that makes coming home a bit more enjoyable. Instead of generic IKEA-standard furniture, you get a conversation starter. Guests notice it immediately. The bugle reference is clear enough to be charming but abstract enough to feel sophisticated. It nods to vintage Americana, summer camps, and military ceremonies without being literal or kitschy about it.
From a practical standpoint, the compact design means you can tuck it into corners or narrow spaces where a traditional coat rack would never fit. Got a skinny hallway? A weird alcove by the door? A studio apartment where every inch counts? This works. And because it stays vertical rather than horizontal, it doesn’t interfere with foot traffic or make your entryway feel cluttered.

The restraint in this design is what makes it successful. There are no unnecessary embellishments, no gimmicks, no trying-too-hard details. Just a pure, confident form that solves a real problem beautifully. In an era where product design often veers toward the overly complex, The Bugle proves that simple ideas executed well will always win.
What I love most is that it demonstrates how everyday objects can be better. Your coat rack doesn’t have to be an eyesore you tolerate. It can be something you actively enjoy looking at, something that makes your tiny entryway feel more intentional and curated rather than cramped and chaotic.

Design by Joffey gets it. Small spaces need smart solutions, and smart solutions can also be delightful. The Bugle delivers on both fronts, turning a mundane necessity into a little moment of joy every time you walk through your door. And in a tiny apartment, those moments matter more than you’d think.

The post This Bugle-Shaped Coat Rack Solves Your Tiny Entryway Problem first appeared on Yanko Design.
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