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A thoroughly unpopular opinion  

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Olive
(@olive)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 15 years ago
Posts: 2201
12/11/2008 3:18 am  

I bought an IKEA Klippan sofa yesterday as part of my efffort to get my home ready to sell. I'm following the home staging bible that reads...'thou shall not have a room with an undefined purpose'. So I needed a small sofa, bought on the cheap that I will likely sell off once the home is sold.

I have to say that although the Klippan is indeed fabricated with particle board, and various other less than quality components, that it's really not such a bad piece. Heck, it only cost me $279USD including the slip cover, I'm sane enough to know I'm not getting Knoll for that kind of money.

But the thing came with a description of the sustainable/recycled components in it's construction, which I found quite satisfying. It flat packs into this amazingly small footprint that I could fit into my VW Passat, and it went together in 7 minutes without tools. Best of all it's actually quite comfortable.

I know this sofa has been in their line for years, but I'd never before considered buying it. I like IKEA for simple things, like candle holders, drinking glasses, bed sheets, etc. I do have a pair of chairs I got from them years back that have held up so well that I reupholstered them, so I thought, what the hey, I'll get the Klippan. I'm truly surprised that I actually like it as much as I do. It's pretty amazing that a sofa pops out of that little package... like those squished up kitchen sponges.

I know many of you villify IKEA as bad design for the unwashed masses, but if you ever bought a Klippan, you might actually be impressed by the cleverness, not the quality, I'm not arguing that point at all, of the thing. For what it is, a cheap sofa, it's a rather exceptional example of the type!


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Modern Love
(@modern-love)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 12 years ago
Posts: 947
12/11/2008 4:04 am  

Blasphemy!!!!
Just kidding.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think the reason IKEA has been looked down upon here has less to do with quality, and more to do with ethical considerations regarding their heavily "inspired/borrowed/stolen" designs.
Yes? No? I dunno?
I stay away from IKEA because it has low resale value. But for your purpose of house staging, why not? To create that modernist aesthetic, it seems more cost effective than renting a real Knoll sofa, and the people viewing the house are not going to care about the label under your sofa anyways.


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azurechicken (USA)
(@azurechicken-usa)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 15 years ago
Posts: 1966
12/11/2008 4:29 am  

Perfect
for that application...


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whitespike
(@whitespike)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 15 years ago
Posts: 3499
12/11/2008 5:15 am  

At that price, you could...
At that price, you could even include it in the sale to entice buyers!!


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Turbo11
(@turbo11)
Trusted Member
Joined: 15 years ago
Posts: 58
12/11/2008 6:26 am  

I've always had a positive...
I've always had a positive feel about IKEA since I was a kid growing up seeing furnished Real World houses done by IKEA. Yes, some items are really tough to install because of production inconsistencies, but overall, I've never had quality issues with them.
Who cares what people think? As long as it sells your house. Most of us have graduated to being elitists and design snobs(don't join them):)


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Annette
(@annette)
Eminent Member
Joined: 15 years ago
Posts: 22
13/11/2008 5:40 pm  

Hi Olive
I must have missed the fact that you're moving. Your house sounded so great - I remember the concrete counter tops and bath. Where are you moving to?
I agree about Klippan. We had one in a room mostly used by our kids (5 in all) and it held up very well


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NULL NULL
(@teapotd0meyahoo-com)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 6 years ago
Posts: 4318
13/11/2008 6:34 pm  

IKEA
Has its place.


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whitespike
(@whitespike)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 15 years ago
Posts: 3499
13/11/2008 6:43 pm  

Just like women.
Just...
Just like women.
Just kidding.


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Modern Love
(@modern-love)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 12 years ago
Posts: 947
13/11/2008 9:27 pm  

OH,
SNAP!


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Robert Leach
(@robertleach1960yahoo-co-uk)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 6 years ago
Posts: 3212
13/11/2008 9:50 pm  

That
the sound of our female posters breaking both your necks ?
😉


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LuciferSum
(@lucifersum)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 15 years ago
Posts: 1874
13/11/2008 10:03 pm  

Ikea
Ikea is a matter of knowing construction and materials and then making informed decisions. I have some simple and lovely pieces from the big blue box.
What irks me about them, aside from copying the classics of Aalto, Saarinen, Breuer, etc, is that they blanket market everything as being 'high quality' when it should be marketed as 'affordable'. There is nothing wrong with temporary solutions. I think this was best highlighted when Ikea released 'Stockholm' - a line of high(er) quality pieces, with price tags to match. If you truly believe your quality is good - why are you touting your new products as the next best-thing?


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barrympls
(@barrympls)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 15 years ago
Posts: 2649
13/11/2008 11:22 pm  

Besides....
IKEA has wonderful cheap bookends.


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azurechicken (USA)
(@azurechicken-usa)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 15 years ago
Posts: 1966
14/11/2008 4:10 am  

DAMN
now I must go to the huge Ikea near(Austin TX.) to check out the new stuff...Last time I got the feeling people (mobbed,weekends) were buying stuff due to lowish prices...not really design buff types in general.I buy something every time I go.The styling in general is quite high.I have a "thing" for the rubber like material you can bake/freeze in:)


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Modern Love
(@modern-love)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 12 years ago
Posts: 947
14/11/2008 2:22 pm  

Ha, I thought I was the only one....
Love that silicone.


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NULL NULL
(@klm-3verizon-net)
Famed Member
Joined: 6 years ago
Posts: 367
14/11/2008 3:41 pm  

I like IKEA.
I go there all the time and have bought bookcases, bathroom sinks and vanities, several kitchens, a few chairs, many housewares and textiles, toys, light fixtures and lamps, and food over the years. They have a lot of good stuff.
That said, I had an interesting experience with a Klippan sofa.
My daughter bought one for her first apartment. After a couple of years she wanted a new look for it so I offered to reupholster it (thinking that would be easier than attempting to copy their slipcover in the fabric she wanted).
It was made in such a way that I had to disassemble it to re-cover some of the parts. The construction was appallingly bad. The arms were boxes made of oriented strand board or flake board or something, and some of the screws were driven in so far that they went through the board. Other screws were added next to them in kind of a random way.
Some of the components for the main frame were pine 1x2 boards with knots. They had broken in two places where there were large knots. This happened in a home with no kids and just two slim adults.
Several types of bolts and screws were used to hold the frame together and their placement didn't seem to follow any plan. Some had split the wood and others were added with extra little blocks of wood for reinforcement.
It looked like it had been made in a high school shop class by kids with no instruction. The foam and fabric covered up all of this and no one would ever have known about it.
I did get it reupholstered in the end. It was a comfortable sofa and actually didn't seem any less so for the lack of quality. I only mention it here because of the astoundingly poor quality of construction. It put me off buying anything from IKEA where the construction is hidden, but that's about it.


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