Mrs. L and I have an “eclectic” style, which is to say if we like it and can afford it and it doesn’t clash too badly with what we have…
If you hit estate sales you can often find older, well made furniture for a very reasonable price. I got two pieces of bedroom furniture (tall chest, wide chest) for $200 and it was built by Lane in 1950 or something. Dovetail joints, real plywood…
I don’t contemplate paying that either. But I like their style, the quality of the designs, the quality of the lumber selected, etc.
What I can contemplate is comparing building my own furniture and realizing that I am saving money. A hobbiest can’t compete with IKEA, or even lower to mid range pricing. However, I can make a comparable dresser to a Thomas Moser for 1 to 2K CAD (WAG, it’s been a while since I priced out a comparison product) and have the joy of building something myself.
I’ve bought most of my second hand furniture off of craigslist, but what site people use is going to depend on your local area and market. One nice thing about craigslist is it lets you set up search alerts that will send you an email whenever an ad with specific keywords is posted.
One thing I have learned on craigslist is that the only way to get good stuff is to have a stored search that alerts you when things with specific keywords are posted and be ready to buy it immediately. The good stuff (priced to move) goes fast.
We’ve gotten $2000 leather armchairs for $200, a $1500 solid cherry media console for $125, and just recently a handmade (by a local woodworking shop) solid alder credenza for $150. All of those I saw the ad, immediately picked up my phone and called the person and said “I can come pick it up right now, or at your convenience”. I only manage to buy about 20% of the stuff that I do that for. The rest is already gone/spoken for in the 30-60 minutes that the email takes to come or that I take to notice the email.
If you peruse the stuff currently listed on craigslist or facebook marketplace, it’s the stuff that’s not good or overpriced that nobody wants to buy.
The other thing you’ll learn if you set up a craigslist search is that no one has any idea what a “credenza” is.
The Walrus is right on all counts. The Nextdoor app for your neighborhood might be another place you find good furniture for sale but you have to move just as fast. Have cash stashed at your house to seal the deal.
And agree, I wouldn’t buy upholstered furniture or mattresses, etc used in this age of ubiquitous bedbugs. Bite the bullet and buy new/online.
Makes me curious as to how much those workers get paid. Surely, considering how much more valuable the store thinks their items are, the workers must be getting paid at least twice as much as other crafters, right?
The Iron Triangle of “Fast, Cheap, Good, pick two” really applies in the furniture case. You can get high quality furniture for cheap if you hunt for 2nd hand stuff but be prepared to wait months or even years for the right piece to pop up at the right price. You can get cheap ikea furniture immediately but it won’t be the highest quality. You can get really high quality furniture that you want new but it’ll cost you and has almost no resale value.
I would hope so. But part of the cost goes to the details, take a look at the legs in this picture:
They are both made of rift sawn lumber. Similar to quartersawn where the grain runs vertically but at a 45 degree angle so that it looks quartered on all four sides. That is the desired orientation for legs both aesthetically and structurally. Most low to mid range furniture makers don’t care enough to get that right.
Though they are in Maine, so they could well pay the craftspeople well above the local salaries while keeping the salaries low compared to the rest of the country.
Plus I’ll bet that some people would just enjoy the work of making quality furniture in a well-equipped shop.
I’ve been drooling over it for years now, but $20K is just too rich for my blood, even though it is probably warranted. If I could actually afford to buy the Gamble House, I could probably afford this furniture to put in it.
We recently bought a new house, the previous owner was having a garage sale. They had a really nice dresser set. I bought all four pieces for $80, and it was in the house when we moved in. It came with a night stand, a dresser / mirror and another dresser. Older, but very solid. And I didn’t have to move it.
I’ve never thought of email alerts before definitely going to try this. I’m generally skeptical of craigslist because of sketchy transactions I had there when I was a teen lol, but might be worth the shot! Feels like an adrenaline-inducing technique though, might cause me to impulse buy even more.
@BippityBoppityBoo I’m not biting the bullet yet, but I just might if I don’t find anything good within the next 2 weeks.
@Czarcasm I would hope so lol. Might be “artisan” furniture pieces? So I’d like to think these are expert wood crafters.