• — not member yet ? I bought a Siesta chair and ottoman off of craigslist (came from an estate sale apparently). The chair looks great and original to my untrained eye, but it has an odd armrest that I can find no information about. I don't know much about the different variations of the Siesta Chair, but I was only able to find a single image of a similar one online. The canvas and leather look worn out enough for it to be original, but there is no sticker on the bottom. I'm just curious if it's an original chair or a good copy. The picture is the one I found online, but I can take another one of my own chair if there's interest. The RUB Antique Company 3 x Ingmar Relling, Spring... Lounge chair Siesta from... Flame Retardatants in Couches and Mattresses Flame Retardants in Couches Keep in mind that these companies use toxic foams, glues, fabric finishes and possibly particle boards. Companies selling green upholstered furniture generally do not use flame retardants.
Always ask, but I have not found one that does. For a list of totally green, non-toxic sofa companies see my post on non-toxic furniture. There are many companies making organic or natural fiber carpets, such as wool. And for rugs, some good options include cotton, rattan or jute. Carpets should explicitly state that they use all natural materials. I go over the greenest carpet companies in this post. Conventional types from big box stores contain a long list of chemicals including flame retardants. However, many big box stores now carry carpets with the Green Label Plus certification which means the carpets emit low levels of VOCs. Always ask about FRs, since these are not considered VOCs.I have a post on window coverings with chemical-free options. Flame Retardants in Insulation HBCD is typically used in polystyrenes, in concentrations of up to 1% in EPS, and up to 5% in XPS. TCPP is typically used in polyisocyanurate foams (up to 10%). There is no EPS or XPS insulation without flame retardants on the market currently.
Almost all spray foams made in the US contain FRs according to Treehugger, usually TCPP () Natural insulation options in . Apple phased out brominated flame retardants (BFRs) in 2008 but uses "safer" unspecified flame retarding chemicals. Motorola is BFR-free and Sony has phased it out of some products (). How much these can leach out of electronics is not clear. With furniture, it is when the particles become dust bound that they become the biggest problem. Flame retardants become mobile in dust as opposed to gas. So keeping a dust free home is of utmost importance. HEPA vacuum is the best way to deal with the dust if you have conventional furniture, carpets and curtains. The Nilfisk brand is recommended by the experts. You can also add a HEPA filter (or even better, this one) to a Shop-Vac. (High-efficiency filter bags are also needed to catch all the fine dust.) (which some people say has a plastic smell), and . A decent one that is a more affordable is this .
I have heard pretty good experiences with Honeywell considering the price. The 12 most popular IKEA products of all time Owning IKEA furniture is practically a rite of passage for millennials leaving their college dorms behind and couples sharing the first apartment. The company releases some 2,500 new products annually, but since the Swedish ready-to-assemble furniture company was founded in 1943, some favorite products have emerged and stood the test of time. The Poäng armchair just celebrated its 40th birthday, while a Billy bookcase is sold every 10 seconds somewhere in the world. We asked IKEA to point us towards the company’s most popular products of all time. These are not necessarily the best-selling overall — it’s hard to calculate that since not all products are sold internationally and some have a limited release — but rather the top-selling products in an array of individual categories, like armchairs or bed frames.It's 25 years since Ikea landed in the UK, with a store in Warrington.
How has it changed British life?We're on first name terms with Billy, Malm and Hemnes. They come in birch veneer, black-brown, oak veneer and white. There's also Odda, Lack, Konsmo and Fjellse but Britons don't know them as well.Since Ikea opened its first UK store in Warrington a quarter of a century ago, the Swedish business's product lines have become a fixture in the nation's homes. Brits have bought eight million Billy bookcases. One in five people sleep on an Ikea mattress, and it's even been suggested that one in 10 babies are conceived in Ikea beds. It now has 19 stores in the UK. So what has been the Ikea effect? It can be disconcerting to walk into a friend's house and be given a glass of water in the same style of tumbler as you've got at home. Then you sit on the same sofa and put the glass on the same coffee table. You glance up at the same poster of a meadow and take a book from the same Billy bookcase - probably if this scenario is to be kept alive - one of Stieg Larsson's Millennium trilogy.
Many homes, while well put together, are instantly recognisable from the Ikea catalogue. Around the world, a Billy bookcase is sold every 10 seconds. The designer Wayne Hemingway is a fan. All the storage units are from Ikea in his house, as is the kitchen. But Kirstie Allsopp, property consultant and TV presenter, abhors the uniformity. "I find that idea of everyone having the same stuff really scary. We aren't all the same." Stop for a moment as you test out that swivel chair and survey the Ikea panorama. It is almost the Seven Ages of Man speech from Shakespeare's As You Like It. There are the 20-something couples about to move in together, holding hands and gazing into each other's eyes as they stretch out on the double beds. Expectant parents study the baby products with grim intensity. A divorcee contemplates life without so much as a kettle or teaspoon to their name. Large groups of students wander around with candles, wineglasses, rugs and pictures. It has become a cliche - when your circumstances change in life, people drift to Ikea.
And buy a cushion.Ikea's huge blue and yellow sheds in out-of-town retail parks are a familiar sight. Other shops follow and a new retail zone is born, albeit one dependent on the car. Ikea has struggled with out-of-town retail planning laws in the UK, says Johan Stenebo, author of The Truth About Ikea, and a former aide of the company founder Ingvar Kamprad. If it had its way it would have gone beyond its current total of 14 stores in England, two in Scotland and one each in Wales and Northern Ireland. Ikea is a place of smooth, unfussy lines. The range is huge. It's logically displayed and so Scandinavian - light and airy with a scent of birch forest. Ikea is a force for good, says designer Wayne Hemingway. "They care about design and it's very adaptable and customisable." Despite the fact Hemingway's house is full of Ikea products, you wouldn't recognise them, he says. "Every bit of our kitchen looks amazingly bespoke but it's all Ikea with different things added. We even customise their bathroom cabinets."
But Allsopp loathes the look. All too often, people move into houses and throw out good quality furniture in favour of new Ikea stuff, shipped over from China. "I love nice Swedish design but that's not what it is. And the beds are different sizes to everyone else's so you end up being forced to buy all the sheets and pillow cases there. "It drives me nuts," she says. Negotiating your way through the store has made for many a pub rant. At first it's like the open road. The possibilities are endless as you stroll from room to room, eyeing up the different products. You will sleep better, start having friends over for dinner, and tackle the clutter. Then at a certain point of traipsing - 45 minutes in my case - a red mist descends. You become wracked by doubt and a crushing sense of defeat. Perhaps the Malm is a better option. Or what about Anebode? Will the bedside table fit the space? Suddenly you don't care. You simply have to get out. But there's no quick way out. You seem to be like a lab mouse, stuck in a psychologist's maze.
You usually emerge clutching something, whether it's a toilet brush or an extension lead. Stenebo says the walking route is carefully designed. "Every 10 or 15 yards there's a small curve that causes the eyes to divert from the horizon to the products. There are bins throughout the store full of toilet brushes or tea lights. In the cafes there are budget meatballs, almond cake and weak coffee. The Swedish flavours have developed a strange sort of following, despite the school dinner vibe of the packed cafeteria. The company says it has served 11.6 billion meatballs and 1.2 billion hotdogs in the UK. Stenebo says the restaurant side of the business has always been close to the heart of Kamprad. "He thought that hungry people are not good customers." For that reason the cafe is always between the showroom and the market place. Ikea brought self assembly to the masses. You observe the products in the showroom, note down the model number and collect them in flatpack form from the warehouse-like market place.
Then you try and assemble it. "This is like some... game where you climb through wood and screws on your hands and knees… and if you don't hurt yourself, you get a shelf," as one blogger put it. Flatpack is much derided but allows costs to be cut massively on transport, says Hemingway. "We can all have a laugh about how much we hate it, but it's the best way." Next comes assembly and following those wordless instructions featuring the Michelin-style man. And contrary to reputation the instructions are uncannily accurate. If it doesn't fit together, it's invariably because of human error. The next problem is getting rid of the mountain of cardboard.The Swedish firm continues a trend for democratising good design that Habitat started in the 1960s. But some of its prices are rock bottom. Lamps, duvets, blankets, cushions, glasses can be bought for a few quid. They resemble loss leaders but are not, Stenebo insists. "Ikea is the world champion in offering value," he says. It's the main reason for their success, Hemingway agrees.
Where else can you buy a double bed, mattress and sheets for under £200? Customer service is better at John Lewis and environmental standards superior at B&Q. Often people are better off buying second-hand. "We need value, customer service, sustainability and originality," she says. But some might find it hard to argue with a £4 duvet.The public hunger for Ikea can cause problems. At its most extreme, it resulted in a brawl at the opening of the Edmonton branch in 2007. People were trampled, scuffles broke out and someone was stabbed - allegedly for trying to bag a sofa reduced to £45. The slowness to get into online shopping exacerbates the overcrowding, says Stenebo. It still doesn't offer its full range on the website. The restrictions on opening new stores in the UK make them the most overcrowded Ikea outlets in Europe, he says. "The UK stores are not a nice day out. There are so many people. At the Wembley store it was close to impossible for us to offer a good visit. It was always overcrowded so they couldn't offer the whole range."
Like pickled herring or Dancing Queen, Ikea divides people into tribes of love and hate. But it goes further. For some Ikea is more than a very successful furniture store. It's a hopeful, Scandinavian lifestyle that we can all own. The satirical site the Onion ran a spoof piece on Ikea "claiming another 10,000 lifestyles". The firm is moving into hotels and designing a neighbourhood of East London. The byproducts of Ikea - from the stubby pencils, free tape measures and bright blue bags - have leeched into the nooks and crannies of the nation's homes. A couple got married at Ikea in Maryland this year, complete with portions of meatballs. It has a cultish quality, some argue. They're selling a fake vision of Scandinavia with a load of "sodding unpronounceable names", Allsopp argues. Stenebo accepts that much of the Swedishness is a gimmick laid on with a trowel. The design team is based in Sweden but they scour the globe for ideas.The flipside of the argument is that it's not a cult but a business giving people something no-one else offers.