antilop high chair tray

antilop high chair tray

antilop high chair straps

Antilop High Chair Tray

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CA, East Palo Alto Dispatched from and sold by DISCOUNTED PRICED. Ikea Antilop Highchair with Tray, Safety Belt, White/Silver ColourDetailsIKEA ANTILOP - Highchair tray, white Product Dimensions47.5 x 38.1 x 37.1 cm Material compositionPolypropylene plastic tray/chair Metal Legs 295 in Baby (See top 100) Date First Available20 Jun. 2015 This product is subject to specific safety warnings IKEA ANTILOP Highchair with wipe clean white plastic tray and seat, silver-colour metal legs. Easy assemble and dis-assembly for transport. ANTILOP - Highchair tray, white to see all 9 reviews Were these reviews helpful? See and discover other items: Best rated High Chair reviews Baby Products > Nursing & Feeding > Highchairs, Seats & Accessories > Highchairs You can select your location to see delivery options. Sold & Fulfilled by Product details of Ikea Antilop High Chair with Safety Belt and Tray Stable but easy to move anywhere




Collapsible for easy storage Handy to bring for traveling because it disassembles in small Favorite in restaurants and hotels worldwide for its Safety belt included to keep baby from standing up Removable tray so you can choose to use or not Specifications of Ikea Antilop High Chair with Safety Belt and Tray Home Source-ANTILOP WITH TRAY Size (L x W x H cm) 58 x 62 x 90 Lazada refund warranty only Bauhütte VP-1 Platinum Office Chair (Black) HANG-QIAO Baby Inflatable Sofa Thickened Chair Portable Security Goodbaby Compact System Luxury High Chair (Red) Rating & Reviews of Ikea Antilop High Chair with Safety Belt and Tray Product Reviews (Total 4) Lowest to Highest Rating Lowest to Highest RatingHover your mouse over the product image to zoom in. 290.672.93The price is for this article number.A highchair makes it easier for small children to eat at the same table as grown-ups, which helps them develop social and eating skills.




Easy to disassemble and carry along...ColourSilver-ColourSize90 cmPiece(s)Add to BasketAdd to FavoritesPayment OptionsDelivery ServiceProduct InformationComplementary ProductsRecommended ProductsStore Stock StatusCampaign DetailsANTILOPthighchair with trayVAT is included in our prices. The products are limited while stocks last.MaterialHighchair leg: Leg:Steel, Pigmented epoxy/polyester powder coatingFoot:Polypropylene plastic, Polyethylene plasticSeat shell for highchair/ highchair tray: Polypropylene plasticSizeWidth: 58 cmDepth: 62 cmHeight: 90 cmKey featuresA highchair makes it easier for small children to eat at the same table as grown-ups, which helps them develop social and eating skills.Easy to disassemble and carry along.The raised edges prevent spills from landing on the floor.Care InstructionsHighchair leg/seat shell for highchair/highchair tray: Wipe clean with a mild soapy solution.Wipe dry with a clean cloth.Good to knowSafety belt included.This product requires setup.Assembly guide for article number 40076093Assembly guide for article number 70279942SMILA tASlideshowJANSJÖ tASlideshowFÖRSIKTIG tSlideshowDRÖMMINGE tSlideshowSMILA tASlideshowLEN tSlideshowJANSJÖ tASlideshowDOPPA tSlideshowYou can choose a store and check the stock status* for the product at the nearest IKEA.




Select StoreIKEA AnkaraIKEA BayrampaşaIKEA BursaIKEA İzmirIKEA ÜmraniyeOnline StoreCheck*Please remember that the stock status at our stores is subject to change within the day.Query ResultThis product is in stock at .This product's availability in inventories is at a critical level.This product is not in stock at .Highchair With TrayAll highchair with tray ProductsBefore I get into the details of customizing high chairs (spoiler alert! I drew an octopus on it!), a few thoughts on the Antilop, in all its modern plastic affordability. There is not any high chair, no matter how expensive, that really gets me excited. I get excited about totally out of budget baby clothes. I could spend a fortune on baby carriers in various amazing fabrics. With my other kids, I had a chunky white wooden high chair that I’d picked up at a yard sale or something. It was nice, and it served us well, but it’s long gone (no baby equipment survived the seven year gap in babies around here). So we needed something or other for Abe to sit in when he eats (which he’s not doing yet (I mean, aside from breastmilk) but will soon).




I thought about just getting a booster seat with a tray to strap to one of our kitchen chairs. But I seem to recall having gone that route at some point with Gus and it making for a lot of food smooshed into our kitchen chairs.Basic, no frills, with unoffensive modern lines….and this thing is TWENTY DOLLARS (plus five more for the tray). You can’t go wrong, I figured. You also can draw all over it with a sharpie without too much pressure to make things perfect. Because, you know….it was $20. And it’s not going to be hanging out in your house for all that long anyway. I would love to give you a full review of the Antilop, but Abe’s not eating solids yet, so I can’t. He likes to sit in it for short periods of time before he starts crying and insisting you pick him up. What I can tell you, though, is that the safety sticker affixed to the inside of your Antilop is so hard to get off it will make you wish you were never born. Or at least that you’d never bought an Antilop.




Ikea, you know I love you, but, seriously: what the hell? Here is the label after I spent approximately 3 hours (or maybe 10 minutes) picking at it with my fingernail: At this point Dave said, “why don’t you just leave the label on there?” And I was like, “NO! (In fact, this is precisely what I did with the sticker on Abe’s Ikea crib. But it’s on the inside edge, where no one but Abe ever sees it. It doesn’t interfere with my attempts to photograph the nursery). So then I googled 359 different methods for removing stickers from plastic and tried them all. None of them worked particularly well by themselves, but by the time I’d done ALL of them, the sticker was gone. One site suggested a hair dryer to heat up the glue and loosen the sticker. Dave complained a lot about doing this, for some reason: “this is SOOOOO boring.” Also, it didn’t work at all. Then there was the “put oil on it and let it soak for 24 hours” method. I couldn’t wait 24 hours, of course, because I’m not that kind of person.




So I waited three minutes.So we finally found the one thing coconut oil doesn’t magically make better. Really, it worked a little, I guess? I went at with a scraper for awhile and made some progress. The Beagle was VERY interested in the high chair once it was coated with coconut oil, incidentally. Next I sprayed some Windex on it. I learned that Windex and coconut oil smell terrible together. OMG: this isn’t better!!! At this point, I was ready to return the $20 high chair to Ikea and spend a million dollars on a high chair if necessary, just to not have to deal with this goopy mess anymore.Next up: Goof Off wipes: These kind of, sort of worked, if I rubbed really, really hard. Finally, I read a tip on using WD40 to get rid of sticker residue: Ignore the part where there’s an octopus. I haven’t gotten to that yet. Just admire the stickerless plastic (it’s kind of scratched all to hell from the scraper, but you can’t see that in the picture).




Is plain white plastic any fun? No, it is not. It needs someone to come along and draw on it with a sharpie. A little while ago, Anu over at Nalle’s House put some Moomins on her high chair, and it looked ADORABLE (spoiler alert again: mine is not as adorable): Moomin High Chair at Nalle’s House So this was my inspiration. I considered a lot of different ideas. Maybe a pattern of some kind? But I’ve always been a little bummed about the lack of octopuses in Abe’s nursery, so I decided to go that route. I sketched out an octopus that I was pretty happy with and spent some frustrating time trying to cut out a stencil-like thing from it: Then I gave up. I was having a very hard time, and I was still going to have to figure out how to get those inside lines for the legs on there anyway…it wasn’t all outline. I tried to sketch it out in pencil first, but I couldn’t see the pencil lines at all. Finally I just threw caution to the wind and started drawing right on the plastic with the sharpie.

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