![Pad & Quill HomePod coaster](https://images.idgesg.net/images/article/2018/02/homepodcoaster1-100749867-large.jpg?auto=webp&quality=85,70)
Image by Pad & Quill
You’ve got to admire Pad & Quill for speed. Mere hours after the news about the HomePod’s white rings started streaking across the ‘net, longtime Apple accessory maker Pad & Quill whipped up a small leather coaster to tuck under Apple’s new smart speaker. It’s just four inches wide, so you’ll barely see it peeking out from under the device (but Pad & Quill left enough room so guests can admire the classy leather). The little leather circle costs $20, but that’s likely less cash than it will cost to refinish your furniture.
![Meres HomePod Holder](https://images.idgesg.net/images/article/2018/02/meres_holder-100749874-large.jpg?auto=webp&quality=85,70)
Image by Meres/Amazon
Not big into leather? Maybe you’ll like some heavy metal. Meres’ 14.1-ounce mount imprisons your pesky HomePod in a case with aluminum bars that keep the device’s streaking potential locked down. Meres was even nice enough to lift the mount a centimeter off the surface so the HomePod won’t get damaged by spilled liquids. But wait! Meres says it comes with a rubber mat “to avoid vibration,” but it’s not visible on any of the product photos. In other words, be careful that you’re not trading some merely ugly white streaks with some seriously harmful scratches.
![cork cropped](https://images.idgesg.net/images/article/2018/02/cork-cropped-100749602-large.jpg?auto=webp&quality=85,70)
Image by Jelinek Cork Group/Amazon
Ah, the cork coaster. You see it in seedy bars, on balconies in tropical resorts, or even on the breakfast table of grandma’s house. And maybe, just maybe, you’ll soon find it under your $350 HomePod. A single cork coaster from the Jelinek Cork Group measures just 3.5 inches, which is exactly the width of the HomePod’s problematic silicone base. That means it’ll be almost invisible unless you’re looking underneath the device. Unfortunately, you’ll have to get 25 at once, but all those other coasters might come in handy when Apple finally releases multi-room support.
![juvalecoasters](https://images.idgesg.net/images/article/2018/02/juvalecoasters-100749571-large.jpg?auto=webp&quality=85,70)
Image by Juvale/Amazon
Juvale’s slate coasters look cool and sleek, and with a width of four inches, they’re wide enough to support your HomePod’s base without being too distracting. Better yet, they each come with four pads on the bottom in order to protect your wooden surfaces from scratches—or, of course, unsightly HomePod rings. Dropping $15 gets you a pack of eight along with a snazzy stand, and they’re attractive enough that you might not mind tossing the seven extra coasters on the dining room table.
![motherboardcoasters](https://images.idgesg.net/images/article/2018/02/motherboardcoasters-100749578-large.jpg?auto=webp&quality=85,70)
Image by Graphics and More/Amazon
Stylistic pairings not really your thing? More of a fan of the Clash than the Cure? Then you’ll love these four blue coasters featuring a photo of a motherboard that will highlight your love of modern tech while failing to pair well with the aesthetic grace of the HomePod. With a width of four inches, though, a single one of these plastic and cork coasters should keep the streaks at bay just fine.
![installationdiscs](https://images.idgesg.net/images/article/2018/02/installationdiscs-100749591-large.jpg?auto=webp&quality=85,70)
Image by Roman Loyala/IDG
In fact, while you’re at it, if you’re unwilling to wait on some borderline tacky motherboard coasters, why not whip out some of those old Mac OS installation discs? Even if you’re not too happy about the current state of OS X, we highly doubt you’re going to be tossing those back in the drive (assuming you can even find a disc drive on your modern Mac). If that won’t do, consider using the DVD for Ashton Kutcher’s 2013 Jobs biopic.
![victoriandoily](https://images.idgesg.net/images/article/2018/02/victoriandoily-100749582-large.jpg?auto=webp&quality=85,70)
Image by Elesa Miracle/Amazon
Modern design, meet Victorian stuffiness. Jony Ive might faint at the sight, but you could always just yank a delicate lace doily from your attic and slip it under the speaker. If that’s too much trouble, check out these seven-inch lace doilies from Elesa Miracle. But exercise caution. After all, they’re doilies, and they have holes. Will the white rings still leave their dastardly marks through the spaces in the lace? We shudder at the thought.
![appletv](https://images.idgesg.net/images/article/2018/02/appletv-100749574-large.jpg?auto=webp&quality=85,70)
Image by Macworld
Apple says the Mac mini is “just big enough to fit everything you want in a desktop,” and at 7.7 inches wide, it’s also just big enough to support your HomePod without stealing the show from the newcomer. We used an older model we had stuffed in the back, and we like to think of it as representing the way Apple’s past supports its future. Want to shake it up a bit? Use an old Apple TV instead.
![walterisaacsonbio](https://images.idgesg.net/images/article/2018/02/walterisaacsonbio-100749575-large.jpg?auto=webp&quality=85,70)
Image by Macworld
A couple of critics called Walter Isaacson’s 2011 biography of Apple’s renowned co-founder a “doorstop,” but now it can be a speaker base as well! With 656 pages of meaty gossip padded between the HomePod and your wood, you’ll ensure that no one ring rules them all. Place it with Steve Jobs’ iconic photo face-up, and you can imagine Jobs looking up at the HomePod and contemplating the company’s present product line. Is that a wince or a smile?
![case](https://images.idgesg.net/images/article/2018/02/case-100749577-large.jpg?auto=webp&quality=85,70)
Image by Roman Loyola/IDG
Think different. In fact, think about not even taking the HomePod out of the base you found it in when you opened the box. Apple’s designs for its packaging are often just as attractive as the devices themselves, so surely you wouldn’t mind letting the HomePod sit in its packaging base on your lovely finished wood countertop, right? Right?
Author: Leif Johnson, Contributing Writer
![](https://www.macworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/leif-100749654-orig.jpg?quality=50&strip=all&w=150&h=150&crop=1)
Leif is a San Francisco-based tech journalist. He's a big fan of fantasy RPGs, and you can find his previous work on IGN, Rolling Stone, VICE, PC Gamer, Playboy, Mac|Life, TechRadar, and numerous other publications.