Not really. I mean, sure, glue mass loaded vinyl to parts or other things to change the apparent density of the object in order to change it's resonant frequency hoping to drop it down to a not a problem frequency. The cost of doing so would be so much more than the cost of the furniture it's not even funny.
I'll tell you 2 stories, as quickly as I can.
I know a guy, he is extremely smart, 40+ years audiophile, bought Magico M2 speakers, I went over after he had them some time, and listened. He was making excesses for them, said he needs new Nelson Pass amplifiers to control them from acoustic feedback. I pointed to the front of his room and said I wager that if you remove those 2 empty speaker cabinets with the drivers removed, that are holding up the TV, the 'acoustic feedback' 'caused by the 'weak amp' will be gone. It took 4-5 months for him to remove the empty speaker cabinets, but he did and now he doesn't need to spent $50,000 on new amps.
Story #2- My first acoustics exploration was in a room 11x17x8 feet, I did a lot of work on that room and there was something still wrong with the bass. I tried to solve the problem for months, finally I concluded that the only part of the room I didn't completely redo yet was the back wall, on that back wall there were 2 bookcases, the cheap particleboard type, full of big coffee table books, I thought diffusion and absorption...
When I make an acoustic change I like to be playing music while I do, as the change, if any, from the new element, will be audible as you place it.
As I wheeled the book cases out of place and out of the room I could hear that bass problem I could not fix... vanish.
Play it how you want, I've said my piece.