February is Academy Awards month, and it's a great chance to take some inspiration for new uses for your club furniture - especially if your establishment is based around a particular shared interest or hobby, or one in which you feel your members' efforts and achievements should be celebrated.
The obvious example is if you run an amateur dramatics group, as you could hold your own Oscars ceremony to hand out trophies to your 'best' actors, actresses, costume designers and so on.
But there are equivalents in plenty of other types of club - such as a player of the year ceremony, if you run a sports club with its own team, or a 'most improved' prize in any club where people are learning a new skill or generally trying to get better at something.
Just remember to make sure your club furniture is suited to audience-style seating, if you want to rearrange your venue to serve as the location for your awards ceremony.
It's not just about putting some chairs in a row - you need to leave space for your winners to make their way up to the stage, regardless of the route they choose to take.
A recent rundown of six memorable Oscar acceptance speeches by the public-speaking organisation Toastmasters International includes several examples of winners whose route to the stage might have been hampered by tightly packed seating.
Robin Williams hugged several people before even reaching the stage to collect his Best Supporting Actor statue for Good Will Hunting - including Ben Affleck, who was seated partway down the row in front of him.
Make sure your audience at least have the space to leave their seat without stepping on anybody's toes, and your ceremony should run more smoothly.
And that might help you to avoid the scene when Roberto Benigni won Best Foreign Language Film in 1999 for Life is Beautiful.
He reacted with typical Italian enthusiasm, leaping not only on to his own seat, but stepping several rows forwards along the backs of the chairs in front.
Even the sturdiest of club furniture isn't really designed for that kind of abuse - but with your seating arranged sensibly, you can avoid forcing award-winners to clamber over the backs of seats to get to your stage.