Skip to main content

The Mine lets you look at its furniture from every angle with 3D imaging

the mine furniture shopping page
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Buying furniture online may give you more options and sometimes better prices than doing it in person, but it can also feel like a gamble. The product that shows up on your doorstep can often look pretty different from the way it looked online — and returning an armchair is a much more daunting prospect than shipping back a shirt that didn’t quite fit or phone case that looks shoddier than expected. The Mine wants to make the online furniture and décor shopping experience a little more tangible.

Formerly ATGStores.com, the Mine relaunched today as more of a one-stop experience with one-on-one help. “Our intent is to have one website where you can reimagine and redesign your home space, you can source the products from the same site, and then also schedule installation and assembly with our strategic partners,” The Mine president Michelle Newbery told Digital Trends. “We take care of all that for our customers.” The complimentary Personal Concierge service lets you connect with someone on the Mine team to ask questions about products, find a specific item, or get help with a design project.

Recommended Videos

As part of Lowe’s, The Mine has access to its Innovation Lab, and it’s using some of its technology to make 3D images of its products and lifestyle shoots. Starting with about 100 products, the images let you get a fuller view of a chair’s legs or the fabric on a couch. “With the 3D imaging, our intent is really to bring that product closer to the consumer,” said Newbery. “Maybe you can’t still technically touch it, but you can interact with it. You can bring it closer to you, you can spin it around, you can look at the texture to help really build confidence with shopping online.” With the lifestyle images, visitors to the site will be able to get a more immersive look at how the furniture looks in staged rooms.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

After reducing its curated selections from four million products to one million, The Mine is focusing on certain brands that don’t have as much of an online presence, such as Bunny Williams Home and Mr. and Mrs. Howard. Newbery says the site’s typical customer will be someone who’s “a little more particular and wants their home to look different from their neighbors’.”

Updated 5/10/2017: Updated to correct the spelling of Michelle Newbery’s name. 

Jenny McGrath
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Jenny McGrath is a senior writer at Digital Trends covering the intersection of tech and the arts and the environment. Before…
Super Mario 3D World + Bowser’s Fury trailer reveals wild new game mode
Super Mario 3D World + Bowser's Fury

Nintendo released a new trailer for Super Mario 3D World + Bowser's Fury, which finally reveals information on the re-release's new mode. Bowser's Fury is an entirely new adventure that features a gigantic Bowser.

Super Mario 3D World + Bowser's Fury is a Nintendo Switch version of the 2013 Wii U game Super Mario 3D World. Nintendo previously revealed that the new edition would feature something called Bowser's Fury, but this is the first time the mode has been shown in any form.

Read more
Qualcomm’s long-awaited second-gen 3D Sonic fingerprint sensor is 50% faster
qualcomm 3d sonic sensor second generation ces 2021 2nd gen

Qualcomm wants to make its in-display fingerprint sensor a little bit more seamless. Its first-generation Sonic Sensor was introduced a few years ago, and at the time offered a decent experience -- but since then, has been overtaken in terms of speed and performance by competing optical sensors. Now, Qualcomm has finally launched a new, second-generation 3D Sonic sensor with big improvements.

The new sensor is 77% larger than Qualcomm's original 3D Sonic Sensor, measuring in at 8mm square, compared to the original's 4mm by 9mm. In other words, you'll be able to place your finger on a larger portion of the screen, making the overall experience a little more seamless.

Read more
3D scanning sheds light on newly discovered 2-million-year-old fossilized skull
3D scanned skull

3D scanning dire wolves, ground sloths, and mammoths in California with Artec Space Spider

Sometimes it takes the very latest technology to answer some of the oldest questions. This week, researchers announced the discovery of an incredibly rare, 2-million-year-old skull in South Africa that is a cousin species to “Homo erectus,” the famous extinct archaic human from the Pleistocene era.

Read more