inexpensive sleeper chairs

inexpensive sleeper chairs

inexpensive ergonomic chair

Inexpensive Sleeper Chairs

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The Original Discount Furniture is FAMILY OWNED and operated in Martin, St. Lucie, and Indian River Counties since 1970. We have built our company by providing beautiful furniture, great service, low prices and hometown relationships from our family to yours. The Original Discount Furniture always offers simple to get, simple to use financing, a NO CREDIT CHECK LEASE PURCHASE OPTION*. Easy FREE Layaway that allows you to make payments while deferring interest, and provides you with benefits when shopping with us. Step inside our beautiful showroom to browse a wide selection of bedroom, living room, and dining room furniture. We offer a wide selection of leather, home office, kids furniture, outdoor patio furniture, and the area's largest selection of brand name mattresses and mattress sets. You'll find brands you know and recognize like Ashley, Capri, Stanley Chair, Coaster, and Spring Air. Make Your House a Home at The Original Discount Furniture! Sleepers, Sofa BedsSofa beds or sleepers are great for many obvious reasons.




First of all they are generally less expensive things to buy than a regular couch. Secondly, what would you do if you have no space for a sofa and the bed separately? Try our sofa beds - acts as a sofa and as a bed at the same time. Time and money saver - most of them are really affordable. Our sofa beds or sleepers are available in all kinds of styles, from fabric (and microfiber) to leather. Besides, you can always have an extra sleeping space - which always comes handy. Sofa beds are great for kids and students. They don't take too much space which is great. They don't cost a lot, which is also great in case... well... something happens and you would need to replace it. Also, they are generally really easy to move around, in case you move a lot or just like to re-organize things. A lot of our sofa beds come with built-in storage. Use storage filter on the left, and also, you can check sofa beds from our Turkish manufacturers: Sunset, Rain and Meyan. They all have their sofas build this way so they can be beds and sofas and they all have pretty handy storage.




Also, Sunset produces one the most popular sofas - Fantasy, which is a little bit more expensive, but built like tank and have a great quality, versatility, and also converts to a true queen size bed.We offer an amazing variety of sofa beds, over 350 of them. However, we display only single sleepers here, but some can have a matching loveseats or chairs as well. Some sectionals also can be used as a beds, so it worth to check sectionals section too. Table and Chair sets Corner & L-Shape Desks All Home Entertainment Furniture Nashville, Franklin, Brentwood, Clarksville, Green Hills, Davidson County, Williamson County, Tennessee area Furniture Store Nashville Discount Furniture is now working with Atlantic Bedding and Furniture of Nashville. We offer name brand furniture and mattresses at 50-80% off of retail prices! We have the best deals in town! Nashville Discount Furniture is a Furniture Store that serves the Nashville, Franklin, Brentwood, Clarksville, Green Hills, Davidson County, Williamson County, Tennessee area.




If you are shopping for Furniture in the stop by Nashville Discount Furniture today.How sleeping beauties can find the best sofa beds for their backs, their wallets, and their small but stylish spaces. Shelter Sleeper Sofa from West Elm and the Davis Queen Sleeper Sofa in leather from Crate and Barrel. . . . . . . . . . . . . “Glued, screwed, and tattooed,” the salesman tells me as I ask him for nothing more arcane than what constitutes a sturdy sofa bed, a not surprisingly popular commodity in a city where more sofa beds are sold than anywhere else in the country. And no wonder: How many of us have the luxury of an actual guest room with a bed? So if you log in some 3,000 hours a year supine on a sleep sofa—or if you have a steady stream of overnight guests—don’t skimp; buy the best mattress and structure you can afford. If you only use a sleeper sofa occasionally, you can probably get by with something less costly. But, where to go and how to get comfort, quality, durability, and fashion at a reasonable price?




In the interest of research, therefore, I always lie down on the job…and so should you. That is, open the bed and test the mattress! If you’re sleeping on a sofa bed every night, look for an innerspring mattress —not foam—that ideally is tufted (this helps to keep the springs in place); quilted (this keeps the padding in place). Ask about the number of coils; more is better and the thicker the wire, the better. (The lower the gauge, the thicker and stronger.) A mattress that is at least at least 4″, more if you can get it. Also ask: How are the coils held together? If they’re not well-secured, they can easily splay out and you’ll wind up sleeping on a lumpy, unsupported mattress. (Imagine flattening a Slinky toy sideways.) Ideally, you should be able to see a cut-away of the mattress in a tiny model. As for the actual sleeping mechanism, it’s interesting to note that the bi-fold mechanism of the classic sleep sofa has barely been altered, despite some tweaking, from its incarnation in 1945 when Bernard (“It’s in-con-tra-vert-ible”) Castro created it.




Parenthetically, there are only a handful of manufacturers who actually produce the metal housing, which is ironically the least costly element of a sleep sofa. Turning a standard sofa into a sleeper will likely add only about $300 to $500 to the unit’s price. The frame should be made from kiln-dried hardwood, like ash, walnut, oak, or maple; woods like birch or poplar are too soft, and particle board and plastic are very low-end choices. The frame should have heft. One salesman told me with a knowing glance, “Kick it when nobody’s looking.” Even a small sofa should weigh a couple of hundred pounds. The framework of the structure should be “glued” and doweled (or “screwed”) together—not stapled or nailed. Corners on the underside should be blocked for dimensional integrity; avoid frames that are bolted together with a steel plate, stapled, or glued (or some combo of these methods). The sofa’s legs should be a part of the frame, not plastic, screw-in cheapies. The sleeper mechanism itself should be constructed from cold-pressed steel, not a cheaper alloy with light-weight aluminum, and its parts should be tubular or rectangular.




When the bed is open, what do the legs look like? Don’t buy it if the four legs (two at the foot and two mid-section) are spindly. One of the most important parts of the sofa bed is the deck, or the trampoline, which is the structure holding the mattress when the unit is folded. For a bed in constant use, get a deck that has wire-mesh webbing, preferably with a structural criss-cross “X” and a U-shaped bar/leg under the deck that extends from one side of the bed to the other. These features provide greater strength and support. The majority of sleepers come with a less costly polypropylene (and occasionally canvas) deck that may not be strong and can sag. Regardless of the deck’s construction, it should be secured to the metal frame with metal springs for “give.” Generally, mattress length is 72″, but not always, and there really is nothing terribly standard about sleep sofa-bed sizes—they range from a narrow cot size to a “Full” or Queen, to European models that have unusual dimensions (Attention Europhiles: Strange dimensions mean strange sheet sizes.)




The padding of the sofa’s seat and back cushions is the second most costly item of the sofa (bed or no bed). There are endless choices, among them high-density foam, combinations of down and feathers, synthetic materials like fiberfill and Dacron, and natural materials like cotton batting and lamb’s wool. Most cushions will be some combination of two or even three of the above, and seat cushions will likely have springs in them, too. One caveat: If foam is used, be sure its one solid block and not particles that are glued together. Despite the importance of the sofa’s structure, the most costly part of the sofa bed is the fabric. Most sofas need about 20 yards, but usually, when you’re selecting fabric at a shop, it’s not sold by the yard but by grade. A higher price for a grade doesn’t necessarily mean that a fabric is sturdier or better. The grade price reflects many things, among them, the structure of the goods; the number of colors in the weave, or the number of screens needed to print it;




its origin and exclusivity; how easy/hard it is to work with the fabric; the amount of waste that might be generated with a pattern that has a difficult-to-match repeat. What you want is a fabric that is sturdy and durable. If you choose a fussy style sofa with a lot of dressmaking details (ruffles, double welting, additional throw pillows, an elaborate skirt), you’ll need more fabric. Some shops will work with “Customer’s Own Material” (COM), while others will not. As for maintenance, twice a year, get out the WD40 and spray the metal mechanism and turn the mattress over, or, if it’s not reversible, swivel the head and foot position. WHERE TO SHOP AND WHAT TO SPEND Low Cost Sleepers: If you have a limited budget you can buy an inexpensive sleeper-chair at Ikea for $199 for occasional use only. Ikea also has at least 30 different conventional sofa beds that range in price from $250 to just over $1,000. CB2, is another good choice, offering a traditional ottoman that opens to a single sleeper for $499 and a more modern-looking sleeper for as little as $899.




Another choice where the tariff is modest is Jennifer Convertibles. Custom Made Sleepers: You can also spend $10,000 (or way more) for a custom-made sleep sofa from the high-end Avery Boardman that has over 30 different silhouettes just waiting to be customized. But you’ll need a decorator to get into its showroom in the D&D Building; D&D can provide a designer if you call 212-759-5408 x204. More Moderate Options: In between these two extremes there are countless resources. Try Carlyle (used to be Carlyle Custom Convertibles) known for its sleep mechanism and comfort. You can design a sofa bed yourself, but this can be pricey. A less costly alternative: look on its floor for samples, custom work never picked up, showroom models or find a model you like and select your own fabric. Castro Convertibles offers many models—including an ottoman that converts into a single bed—for a reasonable tariff. There are also many other moderate options: Crate & Barrel; Pottery Barn: typical price $3,200;

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