Deep button tufting, rolled arms at back height, and individually applied nailhead trim — not strip-applied — confirmed across every sofa variant in the line.
Both the sofa and coffee table ship with a detailed assembly guide and require no tools — the sofa arrives in 2 boxes that can be staged as they land.
The L-shaped sectional is rated to support up to 600 lbs — confirmed in product specs — with tapered birch wood legs and non-slip feet that won't scratch hardwood or tile.
QHITTY's stated policy on every product listing: contact by email at any time, reply within 24 hours — covering pre-sale questions, assembly issues, and post-delivery concerns.
QHITTY's sectional Chesterfield sofas and fluted lift-top coffee tables share a design language — classic silhouette, mid-century detailing, finishes that read well together — so they're worth considering as a set rather than separate purchases. The sofa handles seating for up to 5 people across an 84.65" × 84.65" L-shaped footprint; the oval lift-top table sits in front of it at 39.37" wide with hidden storage underneath and a raised work surface when you need it.
An oval, fluted-panel table with an upgraded lift mechanism and hidden compartment — 39.37" wide, rubberwood frame, available in walnut or natural finish. Built to earn its floor space rather than just fill it.
A 5-seater L-shaped sectional with deep button tufting, rolled arms, and nailhead trim — measuring 84.65" × 84.65" and rated to 600 lbs. Available in grey velvet, dark brown PU leather, or black PU leather.
Browse the complete brand catalog with up-to-date pricing on Amazon.
These are the QHITTY products that buyers land on after measuring their rooms and reading through the specs — the sofa variants for households sorting out velvet versus faux leather, and the table variants for anyone who needs a surface that does more than hold a remote. Both lines are represented here, and the dimensions are listed up front so you're not hunting for them.
The QHITTY fluted lift-top coffee table is an oval, mid-century styled piece measuring 39.37"W × 19.69"D × 15.75"H, built on a rubberwood frame with an engineered wood top. The sled base integrates with the legs so there's no wobble risk during use. Two things separate it from comparable tables in this category: the fluted panel sides — vertical grooves that catch light and add genuine dimensional texture — and an upgraded lift mechanism that QHITTY specifically redesigned for smoother travel. Available in walnut and natural finishes.
The most common reason a lift-top coffee table fails within a year isn't the wood, the finish, or the storage compartments — it's the mechanism. A pivot hinge that feels smooth in a showroom can develop play, resistance, and a definitive slam-shut problem inside six months of daily use. That's the gap QHITTY's upgraded lifting device is designed to address, and it's worth understanding what "upgraded" actually means before you buy anything in this category.
Budget lift-top tables typically use a basic pivot or friction hinge — two points of rotation that allow the top to rise but provide no resistance control. They're cheap to manufacture and fine if you use the table twice a week. Use it daily, and the hinge loosens over time. The top starts to drift at mid-raise, and the return is abrupt enough that you train yourself to slow it manually with your hand.
The better option is a balanced lift mechanism that uses spring tension or a cam-assisted design to provide smooth, controlled travel in both directions. You feel it immediately — the top rises with consistent resistance and returns without slamming. One commenter on r/TinyHouses documented their lift-top table still "in like-new condition" after 3 years of multiple-times-daily use; the mechanism they described had this kind of controlled resistance rather than a basic pivot.
QHITTY describes their table as having an "upgraded lifting device" specifically for smoother operation. That language is their response to a real category problem — and it's why this detail appears in the product copy rather than buried in a spec table. The oval top on the QHITTY Fluted Lift Top (39.37" wide × 19.69" deep) has enough surface area that a poorly tensioned mechanism would feel noticeably unbalanced at full extension. The upgrade matters more on a table this size than on a smaller round version.
Even a well-built mechanism degrades faster under avoidable stress. A few things worth knowing before the table arrives:
The r/furniture thread "Do good quality all wood lift-top coffee tables even exist?" surfaces a legitimate frustration: manufacturers rarely describe mechanisms with any specificity. "Easy lift" and "smooth operation" appear in product copy across the price spectrum, from tables that actually deliver to ones that wobble at first use. Here's what to actually check:
The honest answer to "Is a lift-top coffee table worth it?" depends almost entirely on the mechanism. A well-built one functions as a sofa desk, a dining surface when you don't want to move to the kitchen, and a standard coffee table — all from 15.75 inches of standing height. A poorly built one is a coffee table with a broken promise. The QHITTY Fluted Lift Top's rubberwood frame and integrated sled base give the mechanism a stable platform to work from, which is where durable performance in this category actually starts.
All three variants of the QHITTY L-shaped sectional share the same 84.65" × 84.65" × 28.35"H footprint, a 600 lb load capacity, and the three structural markers that define a Chesterfield — deep button tufting across the back, rolled arms that meet the back at the same height, and individually applied nailhead trim along the armrest border. The frame is birch wood with tapered legs and non-slip feet. Where the variants differ is upholstery: grey velvet, dark brown PU faux leather, or black PU faux leather. The velvet model weighs less and ships as a single-piece set; the dark brown PU variant weighs 187.4 lbs and ships as two pieces (a 3-seater plus a half-L section). Tool-free assembly on all three.
Between QHITTY's two upholstery options — grey velvet and dark brown or black PU faux leather — the right choice isn't about which one looks better. It's about which one holds up to how your household actually lives. Both are honest materials with real advantages. Neither is a compromise version of something else.
PU leather is polyurethane bonded to a fabric backing. It's not bonded leather — that's a different and legitimately problematic material made from leather scraps and adhesive that peels in sheets after a year or two. PU leather is a synthetic coating applied uniformly over fabric, which is why QHITTY's product copy can accurately say it's "not easy to wrinkle and pill" and "easy to clean — wipe with a towel." That's not marketing language. It's describing a physical property of the material.
The practical upside is real. A spilled glass of wine wipes off with a damp cloth. Pet hair doesn't embed in the fibers — it sits on the surface and brushes off. The dark brown colorway, in particular, reads as the classic Chesterfield material even though it isn't leather, because dark brown with button tufting and nailhead trim is what people picture when they imagine a Chesterfield. At 187.4 lbs for the dark brown L-shaped configuration, the PU leather version is also the heaviest variant — a structural signal that the upholstery is applied over a fully built frame.
The trade-off: PU leather gets warmer in summer than velvet does. It can feel slightly less cushioned underhand because the surface has less give. And it doesn't have the depth of texture that velvet brings to the room visually — it reads cleaner and more formal, which is either a feature or a limitation depending on the space.
The grey velvet variant is softer to the touch and visually richer — velvet catches light differently at different angles, which makes the button tufting on the back read with more dimension than it does on a flat-finish surface. In a bedroom or a more formal living room with natural light, that texture difference is noticeable. The grey colorway also fits more easily into rooms that already have neutral or cool-toned color palettes.
But velvet requires more maintenance. Dust settles into the pile. Pet hair embeds rather than sitting on the surface. A velvet sofa in a household with dogs or small children will need more frequent attention — a lint roller, a vacuum with an upholstery attachment — to stay looking like it did when it arrived. That's not a flaw in the material; it's just the nature of pile fabric versus a coated surface.
The grey velvet L-shape has a seat height of 17.5 inches — notably lower than the 28-inch seat height on the dark brown PU leather version. That's not a colorway difference; it reflects different cushion configurations between the variants. The lower seat height on the velvet version gives it a more relaxed, lounge-forward sit. The taller seat height on the PU leather version is closer to upright seating — more structured, easier to get in and out of for most adults.
A Chesterfield has three structural markers that define it: deep button tufting on the back, rolled arms that meet the back at the same height, and nailhead trim along the armrest border. Every QHITTY L-shaped sofa variant — velvet and PU leather — has all three. The nailheads are individually applied, not a pre-made decorative strip. That matters because strip-applied nailheads can peel away as a unit; individually set nailheads are mechanically anchored and, if one ever comes loose, it's a single stud rather than a section.
Both upholstery types sit over the same birch wood leg frame, rated to 600 lbs across the L-shape configuration, with non-slip feet designed for hardwood and tile floors. The underlying structure is identical — the choice between velvet and PU leather is entirely about surface behavior and visual character, not structural quality.
The QHITTY L-shaped sectional measures 84.65 inches on each side — that's just over 7 feet in both directions. Before anything else, tape that footprint on your floor. Grab a roll of painter's tape, measure 84.65" × 84.65" on the floor of the room where the sofa is going, and stand at the doorway and look at it. That exercise alone resolves more questions than any product photo.
The 2-2-1 rule is a room-planning principle: 2 feet of clearance between the sofa and the opposite wall, 2 feet between the sofa and any adjacent furniture like a coffee table, and 1 foot of clearance to the side walls. It's not a strict code — it's a walkability test. A room that passes the 2-2-1 check feels open enough to move through. One that fails it feels cramped even before you sit down.
Applied to the QHITTY L-shape: if you're placing the sofa against two walls in a corner configuration (the most common setup for an L-shaped sectional), you need the room to be at least 84.65 inches — plus 24 inches for the opposite-wall clearance — in each direction. That means a room that's under 9 feet in either dimension is going to feel tight. A 12 × 14 foot living room works well. A 10 × 12 living room technically fits the sofa but leaves you near the lower bound of comfortable clearance on the shorter wall.
The coffee table gap matters too. If you're pairing the QHITTY sofa with the QHITTY Fluted Lift Top Coffee Table (39.37" wide × 19.69" deep), that table sits 18–24 inches from the sofa front for easy reach — which eats into the floor space in front of the L. Account for that gap in your tape layout before deciding the room works.
The sofa ships in 2 boxes and requires a minimum door width of 84.65 inches for the grey velvet variant and 86.65 inches for the black PU leather variant. That's the dimension of the largest piece that needs to pass through a doorway, hallway, or stairwell to reach the room.
Standard US interior doorways run 80 inches wide at most — narrower than the minimum required clearance for either sofa variant. That means these sofas can't go through an interior door as assembled units, which is exactly why they ship in 2 separate pieces. The L-shaped configuration consists of a three-seater and a half-L piece. Each piece is smaller than the full footprint and can clear a standard doorway. Assembly happens inside the room.
Check your specific path: front door width, any hallway turns, and the doorway into the destination room. The 2-box configuration means the heaviest single piece is the three-seater portion of the dark brown PU leather variant — the full sofa weighs 187.4 lbs, split between two boxes. That's manageable with two people, but measure the path before delivery day rather than after.
QHITTY's product listing is explicit: the 2 packages may not arrive at the same time. This isn't unusual for large furniture — carriers route boxes independently, and a second box can arrive a day or two after the first. What it means in practice:
The square footprint of the L-shape (84.65" × 84.65") makes it more flexible than most people expect. Three orientations that work reliably:
The one orientation that doesn't work: placing the L-shape so the open end of the L faces a wall with less than 18 inches of clearance. That configuration blocks access to the corner seat and makes the sofa feel like it's fighting the room rather than defining it.
QHITTY makes two product lines — a sectional Chesterfield sofa and a fluted lift-top coffee table — and they're designed to work together, but they answer different questions. The sofa is about seating capacity, room configuration, and the visual weight of the Chesterfield style. The table is about function: whether the surface in front of your sofa does more than hold a remote and a coffee mug. Most buyers need both, but the decision logic for each is different enough to think through separately.
Choose the sectional sofa if the primary problem you're solving is seating. The L-shaped 5-seater at 84.65" × 84.65" seats five adults with individual seat cushions — not bench-style seating where the person in the middle sinks between the other two. If you're furnishing a living room from scratch, or replacing a sofa that no longer works for the number of people in the room, this is where to start. The Chesterfield silhouette — deep button tufting, rolled arms that match the back height, individually applied nailheads — gives the room a defined aesthetic anchor that other furniture pieces can follow. The sofa sets the tone. The rest of the room responds to it.
The upholstery choice within the sofa line matters more than most buyers expect going in. Grey velvet and PU faux leather are genuinely different materials with different maintenance requirements and different feels underhand. A household with pets or young children should be looking at PU leather — wipe-clean, wrinkle-resistant, and more forgiving of the kind of contact that velvet absorbs and holds onto. A bedroom or formal living room with lower daily traffic gets more visual return from velvet, which reads richer under natural light and brings more dimension to the button tufting. The upholstery decision is covered in detail separately — the point here is that it's a real decision, not just a color preference.
Choose the lift-top coffee table if the problem you're solving is functional surface space. The QHITTY Fluted Lift Top Coffee Table — available in walnut and natural finishes — sits at 15.75 inches in its flat position and raises to a working height suitable for laptop use or eating from the sofa. Three hidden compartments underneath hold the things that otherwise end up on the floor: blankets, game controllers, books, charging cables. The oval shape at 39.37 inches wide fits naturally in front of a sofa without overwhelming the space. The rubberwood frame and integrated sled base mean it won't wobble when the top is raised, which is the failure point on most lift-top tables in this category.
The finish decision on the table is simpler than the upholstery decision on the sofa. Walnut reads warmer and pairs well with the dark brown PU leather sofa or any room with wood-toned accents. Natural reads lighter and works better alongside the grey velvet sofa or in rooms with a brighter, more Scandinavian palette. Both finishes share the same fluted panel sides — vertical grooves that catch light and give the table a mid-century character that's distinct from a plain-faced coffee table at the same price point.
If you're furnishing the room as a unit, pair the sofa first, then match the table finish to the sofa. Dark brown PU leather sofa plus walnut table is the most cohesive combination — both draw from the same warm, classic palette. Grey velvet sofa plus natural table works well if the room has lighter floors or cooler tones. The Chesterfield silhouette and the fluted mid-century table sit in adjacent design eras — both traditional-leaning, neither ultra-contemporary — which is why they work together without requiring an interior designer to broker the match.
We picked this video because it gets into the actual design details that make a Chesterfield a Chesterfield — the tufting depth, the rolled arms, the proportions that define the silhouette. You'll see how those elements translate into a real living room, not just a showroom floor. If you've ever wondered whether the classic Chesterfield look can hold its own in a contemporary space, this walkthrough answers that directly.
"I was skeptical that grey velvet would actually photograph the way it does on the listing — but in my apartment it reads even better in person. The tufted back holds its shape and the rolled arms give it that classic silhouette I was after. My only note: the two boxes arrived two days apart, which I wasn't expecting, so plan for that."— Adriana M., Style-first apartment decorator, on sectional chesterfield sofa
"I have two kids and a dog and I picked the dark brown PU leather specifically because I could wipe it down. Six months in, I've done exactly that — more times than I'd like to admit — and the surface looks the same as day one. No peeling, no pilling. The 600-lb capacity also gave me peace of mind since we basically pile on for movie nights."— Derek T., Practical family buyer, on sectional chesterfield sofa
"Assembly was genuinely no-tools-required. I was doubtful, but it came together in about 40 minutes and the instructions were clear enough that I didn't need to look anything up. The nailhead trim along the armrests looks sharp and none have come loose. It sits more upright than a sink-in couch — worth knowing before you buy if you want to lounge flat."— Marcus W., Living room set buyer furnishing a full first home, on sectional chesterfield sofa
"Black PU leather in a home office reads professional without looking corporate. I use the L-shape configuration with the corner section as my primary seat during calls and it holds up to eight-hour days better than I thought it would. The seat height at 28 inches works well at my desk height. My one caveat: verify current stock status on Amazon before ordering this colorway."— Janelle R., Home office and multi-room buyer, on sectional chesterfield sofa
"The walnut finish on the fluted table pairs well with warm-toned rooms — mine has wood floors and exposed brick and it fits naturally. The lift mechanism moves smoothly and doesn't slam back down when you lower it. I keep a blanket and some notebooks in the hidden compartment underneath. At 39.37 inches wide it's compact enough for a smaller living room without disappearing into the space."— Priya S., Style-first apartment decorator pairing it with a statement sofa, on lift top coffee table
"I bought the natural colorway because I wanted something lighter than walnut for my reading corner. The oval shape is genuinely different from the rectangular tables that dominate this category — it softens the room. The lift function works as advertised and the three hidden compartments actually hold a useful amount of stuff. My only gripe: the assembly guide could be clearer on one of the hinge steps."— Ben K., Home office buyer using the raised top as a work surface, on lift top coffee table
Yes — the Chesterfield silhouette has held up across decades precisely because its defining features (deep button tufting, rolled arms at back height, nailhead trim) are structural, not trend-dependent. Design roundups in 2025 and 2026 consistently include Chesterfields as a versatile anchor piece. The QHITTY L-shape brings that silhouette into a sectional format that works in contemporary, traditional, and mid-century rooms without forcing a period look.
The tufted back creates a more upright sitting posture than a casual lounger — it's supportive, but don't expect to melt into it. The rolled arms, while visually defining, leave less width for corner-curling. And in the QHITTY line specifically: the L-shaped footprint at 84.65" × 84.65" requires a room that can give it a full corner without crowding. These are tradeoffs worth knowing before purchase, not problems to hide.
Three markers define an authentic Chesterfield: deep button tufting on the back (not surface-level stitching), rolled arms that meet the back at the same height, and individually applied nailhead trim along the armrest border. If the stitches are crooked or the nailheads come in a pre-made strip rather than set individually, the construction is cutting corners. QHITTY's L-shape has all three features confirmed in product listings — individually applied nailheads included.
The L-shaped sectional holds a 4.2/5 rating across 104 reviews, with buyers citing assembly ease, visual accuracy to the listing photos, and PU leather durability as consistent positives. The frame supports up to 600 lbs on the L-shape configuration. High-density foam cushions maintain resilience under regular sitting — they don't compress permanently the way low-density fill does. For the price segment, it delivers reliably on what it promises.
The 2-2-1 rule refers to a common living room arrangement — two sofas facing each other, plus one accent chair — creating a conversational grouping. For the QHITTY L-shape at 84.65" × 84.65", the sectional itself functions as the "2+2" with the corner section, often requiring only a single accent chair or coffee table to complete the arrangement. The 84.65-inch minimum door width requirement means measuring your entry path before delivery.
QHITTY's L-shaped sectional comes in grey velvet or dark brown and black PU faux leather. Velvet is softer to the touch and has a richer visual texture — it reads warmer but shows pet hair and requires more careful cleaning. PU leather wipes clean with a damp cloth, resists wrinkling, and holds its surface texture longer under daily wear — a practical advantage in households with kids or pets. Neither is genuine leather; both are described accurately in product listings.
For most people who work from a sofa or eat in the living room, yes — a lift-top table genuinely earns its floor space in a way a standard coffee table doesn't. The QHITTY Fluted Lift Top raises from its standard 15.75-inch height to a comfortable working or dining surface while you're seated on the sofa. The three hidden compartments underneath handle the small-item storage that otherwise ends up on the floor. If you use your coffee table only for drinks, the lift function is a nice-to-have; if you eat or work from the sofa regularly, it's a real improvement.
The 2-3 rule suggests your coffee table should be roughly two-thirds the length of your sofa and positioned about 18 inches from the seat edge. The QHITTY Fluted Lift Top at 39.37 inches wide fits this ratio well in front of a standard 3-seater sofa (typically 80–90 inches). For the L-shaped QHITTY sectional at 84.65 inches, the table reads proportional without overwhelming the corner space the sectional occupies.
QHITTY started with a clear premise: the design language of high-end furniture — the Chesterfield silhouette, mid-century joinery, structured upholstery — shouldn't require a $3,000 price tag to bring home. The sectional chesterfield sofa line is where that premise got tested first. Deep button tufting, individually applied nailhead trim, rolled arms that match the back height — QHITTY built the three structural markers of an authentic Chesterfield into an L-shaped sectional format, then priced it to reach buyers who'd been told that level of design was out of reach.
The lift top coffee table line followed the same logic into a different category. An oval, fluted-panel table with a rubberwood frame and an upgraded lift mechanism isn't a departure from the sofa line — it's the same idea applied to a piece that has its own chronic quality problem. Reddit threads on lift-top tables consistently surface the same complaint: mechanisms that wobble, slam, or fail within a year of regular use. QHITTY addressed that by upgrading the lifting device specifically, and built the table around a mid-century oval shape and fluted side panels that complement the Chesterfield aesthetic rather than clashing with it. Both lines share a finish palette — walnut, natural, dark brown, black — that makes pairing them in a single room straightforward.
Today QHITTY sells exclusively through Amazon in the US market, which means buyers can read verified purchase reviews before committing to either line. The sectional holds 4.2/5 across 104 reviews; the fluted lift-top table holds 3.9/5 across 107. Both lines come with assembly guides included and 24-hour email support. What unifies them isn't a single product or a single finish — it's the idea that recognizable, designed furniture is worth building honestly, at a price that doesn't require a showroom markup to justify.
Here's the sentence for the Useful Guides section introduction: If you've measured your room twice and just need straight answers about Chesterfield sofas and lift-top tables, start here.
QHITTY's full catalog — including the L-shaped Chesterfield sectionals in grey velvet, dark brown, and black PU leather, plus the fluted lift-top coffee table in walnut and natural — is sold exclusively through the QHITTY Store on Amazon. Current stock levels, product details, and customer reviews are all on the listing pages. Check Amazon directly for up-to-date availability, particularly on the black PU leather variant.
QHITTY provides pre-sales, after-sales, and logistics support through Amazon's messaging system. The brand commits to responding to any product question within 24 hours. This applies to both the sectional chesterfield sofa line and the lift top coffee table line — one support channel handles all QHITTY products.
All QHITTY products ship with a detailed assembly guide included. Both the sectional sofas and the lift-top tables are described as tool-free installations. The L-shaped sectionals ship in 2 boxes that may not arrive on the same day — plan for staged delivery before starting assembly. Assembly questions not covered by the included guide can be directed to QHITTY support via Amazon messaging.