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Ikea or not?

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Pimpwerx

Member
Got a studio in Brooklyn, and want to get some decent furniture. Should I go with Ikea stuff, or is there other cheap furniture of similar or better quality? PEACE.

EDIT: Also, what is a good place in NYC to get a good, refurb mattress? There was Resnick up in Albany, and the mattresses were like new and a lot cheaper. But I don't know of a similar place down here. Any suggestions are welcome.
 

element

Member
other cheap stuff will look like hell. ikea will give you a nice look for a alright amount of money.
 

Particle Physicist

between a quark and a baryon
i just got myself a desk from ikea. 40 bucks. not bad. they are having a sale right now, so some the items you want may be reduced...

i would also check craigslist. people are always selling shit for cheap on there.. and they also have a section where people are just giving stuff away.
 

miyuru

Member
quadriplegicjon said:
i just got myself a desk from ikea. 40 bucks. not bad. they are having a sale right now, so some the items you want may be reduced...

i would also check craigslist. people are always selling shit for cheap on their.. and they also have a section where people are just giving stuff away.

That's actually really cool. Surprising as it may be, it's actually hard to dispose of larger items, y'know?
 

GhaleonEB

Member
Firest0rm said:
I keep hearing Ikea is for university students.

Smart, stylish university students. :)

Ikea rocks. If you have not been to one of their stores, it's worth it because the layout and style is so fun. I've only been there once, but we got a stylish, well-built table and chairs for cheap, and they've held up over time. Great store.
 

Pimpwerx

Member
Looks like Ikea has enough variety that it could work. Looking on craigslist too. Thanks for that suggestion. PEACE.
 

ronito

Member
Well here's a definite no.

http://www.woollymammoth.com/keith/whatever/ikea.html


A Letter to Ikea


Keith Snyder
Brooklyn, NY 11217


To: Ikea Customer Service
8352 Honeygo Blvd.
Baltimore, MD 21236


July 18, 1998


Dear Sir or Madam,

I am taking a break from assembling my 73x73 "Expedit" wall unit to express to you my gratitude for how interesting Ikea has made my life today.

What could have been simply another boring weekend has been transformed into an adventure, the likes of which I experience only when I shop at and subsequently assemble furniture sold by your lovely company.

My first thank-you goes to the service counter, where they increased my sense of suspense by drawing out the "fifteen-minute wait" by an additional fifteen minutes! How clever! They knew I'd be doubly happy when my gray "Expedit" wall unit finally appeared.

This same impish sense of humor was evident when, after the hour's drive back home, I unboxed my gray "Expedit" wall unit to find that it was a black "Expedit" wall unit. Please forward my thanks to the service staff for sensing my poor interior design choice and taking it upon themselves to correct it.

Still chuckling over this delightful detour to my expectation, I began to assemble my black "Expedit" wall unit.

In hiring documentation writers who place clarity above simplicity, most companies reveal that they are humorless entities without the personal touch. Ikea is to be commended for their choice to create assembly instructions which not only do not use words at all -- thus allowing people who may not speak the world's primary languages to enjoy the identical experience on long Saturdays around the globe -- but which allow the illustrator free range for his own personal artistic license. A less creative, free-spirited company would balk at releasing technical drawings which show holes where they are not and do not show holes where they are, which do not explicitly show the consumer how to differentiate the side pieces from the top, nor the top from the bottom, and which have no indication of the fact that the shelves are not intended to sit atop their supports, but rather surround them. But I have learned to look forward to Ikea's droll, delightful, impressionist documentation. After all, if Seurat can create the impression of people at a French seaside using only colored dots, why should an Ikea technical illustrator not create only the impression of accuracy?

Also please thank your documentation team for allowing me the luxury of putting aside my precious projects for an hour or two of three-dimensional puzzle-solving. How did you know I so enjoy Rubik's Cube and Chinese woodblocks? I have had my black "Expedit" wall unit assembled and disassembled three times now, and I still have not solved it! A hearty congratulations to your dedicated staff-- I assemble and disassemble things all the time as part of owning a music studio, and you've managed to do what teams of Japanese, Dutch, and American documentation writers have failed to: You've got me stymied! I'll beat you on this next go-round, though; I believe I now see it. Of course, the only reason I see it is that I seem to have run out of other combinations, but a brute force solution beats none.

(I do, however, think it is not entirely fair play to hide so many of the pre-drilled holes. I can see hiding one or two, but gluing veneer over two entire sides and leaving only the faintest dimples as evidence of the holes lurking beneath them seems a bit out-of-bounds and not quite preux, wouldn't you say?)

Please also forward my thanks to whoever designed the veneer. While most consumers would be satisfied with a nice, clean, smooth, featureless gray -- oops, I mean black! -- surface, you were able to discern that I prefer to think of myself as an individualist, and would thus find such perfection boring. I'm very impressed with your foresight: Kudos to you for knowing that after the third complete reassembly and repositioning of my black "Expedit" wall unit, not a surface would remain unchipped. I am now the very proud owner of a brand new $249 shelf unit which looks as though it did not survive that last Florida hurricane. Thank you so much for allowing me to express my non-conformity through my interior furnishings.

Please also relay my gratitude to the sophisticate who intuited that six would be too symmetrical a number of plastic feet for the bottom of such a work of art, and who therefore removed one from my package, a subtle and insightful move, and one more commonly associated with the Futurist art movement than with most furniture stores. The positioning of five plastic feet into six pre-drilled holes was an unexpected and delightful intellectual and aesthetic challenge, and one which brought a wry smile and a colorful comment to my lips.

It seems I have so many things for which to be grateful that I would simply drone on forever if I tried. If you continue to give all your customers such excellent solutions to their needs -- Needs they weren't even aware they had! Wow! -- the future of your company is easy to predict. After all, happy customers are return customers.

I now return to my $249 chipped, incorrectly (re-re-)assembled, black "Expedit" weekend project. Although I would love to do this all the time, I cannot always get to New Jersey, so next weekend, as a way of replicating the experience, I am considering staying home and banging myself repeatedly in the head with a hammer.


My best regards,


Keith Snyder
Pleased consumer
 

Chittagong

Gold Member
In Scandinavia IKEA is considered pretty ghetto.

I had once a huge IKEA glass table that decided to spontaneously explode one summer day, shattering into pieces smaller than dime. What a fucking mess it was. Hadn't touched it for hours before that.

I had also a IKEA lamp. They make cool looking lamps. The problem was that for some reason the rubber on/off switch on the lamp melted. Made it impossible to switch on and off.

I even had a IKEA drawer for towels and bedsheets. Unfortunately they chose to be cheap materials so eventually that the bottom of each drawer box became so bent that it wouldn't hold any stuff - it'd in fact fall if you'd place any weight on it.

Currently all that I have left are two IKEA work chairs in my working room. It just happens that their mechanics design isn't top notch, so when you sit the parts move a bit, causing bottom screws to come loose and fall off every couple of days, to be screwed back even tighter.
 

Chittagong

Gold Member
Oh, almost forgot the advice to the thread starter. When I was a teenager, my mom suggested to me that I'd only but the highest quality design furniture. Collect money for a year and buy a table. Collect money for another year and buy chairs. Build your flat over the years - and you'll truly love it. Use books of famous designs as reference. She had done it, and despite not coming from a rich background, she had furnished our appartment with top quality design stuff only by the time I was born.

I didn't believe her initially but got stuff from IKEA, as detailed above. I rather quickly realized she was right after all. For my first year living alone I didn't have a bookshelf. The books were on huge piles. Then I finally got the top quality solution I had hoped for. It was so worth it.

My current dining room table is 20 years old, from my mom, top Finnish design and superb quality. It looks very modern and is in perfect shape.
 

fennec fox

ferrets ferrets ferrets ferrets FERRETS!!!
I furnished my entire apartment with Ikea, and I'm older than university-age, so here are some PROTIPS for Ikea shopping.

OK, first off, don't buy computer desks, desk chairs, or really fancy-looking lights/lamps from Ikea. Their office stuff falls apart fast and the fancy-looking stuff will either be very flimsy or just plain not go together right. Get workspace stuff at a computer or office store.

Their bookshelves (Billy) are great. Their modular bookshelves (Ivar) are also good, but the taller they are, the easier it is to fuck up their construction and end up with the Leaning Tower of Shit.

Don't get futons from Ikea either. They're better elsewhere. Get all the living-room chairs and seats you want, though, because they rule.

Don't forget to eat the meatballs in the cafeteria.

I think Chittagong's mom has a point, but WTF, I'm too busy building my wealth to spend it on dumb shit like four-figure furniture. Why should I have to spend so much money on furniture if the Ikea version looks OK and successfully holds my TV/my books/me? My costliest piece of furniture was by far my bed.
 

Cherubae

Member
I visited my first Ikea when on vacation in Oakland. The stick-to-the-wall-and-push lights did not work at all when I got them home, but the cheese grater I purchased is awesome. It came with 2 sizes of grater-lids and a dish that holds all the shredded cheese. I don't even buy preshredded cheese anymore and my guy even volunteers to shred the cheese when I'm cooking (he's probably just hungry though, but I like to think it's because of the Ikea cheese grater).

Some of their stuff is good, and then some (like my tossed lights) are absolutely crap. My uncle bought a lot of his furniture there and he says assembly is very easy.


I get my dyson vacuum tomorrow... this should be fun :D
 

bionic77

Member
Ikea is cheap and a lot of their stuff breaks pretty easily but it is the best option for cheap temporary furniture.

I furnished my studio in DC with Ikea stuff. Value was amazing and lot of the stuff lasted all 3 years for law school. I think for a bed, sofa, computer desk, dining table with 4 chairs, lounger chair, and some lamps all cost me less than a thousand dollars. My only beef was that the bed kept on breaking, but I eventually fixed that with some nails.

If I had more money for my furniture budget I never would have gone with Ikea though.
 
Ikea is amazing. But don't go for the cheaper stuff they sell unless you are on a tight budget. You get what you pay for. Also, Ikea stuff isn't meant to be moved so once you build it, put it where it belongs and never ever move it again.

Still beats paying 3 times as much for something some place else.
 

FightyF

Banned
For a second, I went "HOLY CRAP!" because your message didn't end with "PEACE", but then I noticed that you edited your post :p

IMO Ikea is overpriced for the quality you get.

But then again, my apt is furnished by Walmart and Staples.
 

Pimpwerx

Member
I'm going there Saturday I think. Gonna buy a sofa and some tables I think. Not sure what to do about the bed yet. PEACE.
 

Macam

Banned
Fight for Freeform said:
For a second, I went "HOLY CRAP!" because your message didn't end with "PEACE", but then I noticed that you edited your post :p

IMO Ikea is overpriced for the quality you get.

But then again, my apt is furnished by Walmart and Staples.

That was the only reason I even clicked the thread, and I thought the same thing until I saw it quietly tucked at the end of the first line.
 

NohWun

Member
Ikea has some good stuff, and they have some crap.

Avoid the stuff which is just made of thin laminated particle board.

Look for thicker construction or real wood pieces.

Don't forget to check out their "AS IS" section, too.
Sometimes you can score some good deals there.
Of course, that also applies to most furniture stores.
 
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