I think that's so that you can slide a tray on or off, however since the wheels aren't braked that could be a poor piece of design.Is there a bit missing along the right hand edge of the top shelf?
Martin.
That would be heading for the skip if it was mine, can't imagine anyone ever paying for one so don't bother wasting your time
Paint one leg a bright colour.
Pete
Sadly I would agree - I like old furniture but that stuff just isn't "in vogue"
Have you seen that Ikea are now planning a buy-back scheme to re-purpose unwanted items - a response to the waste we are creating. There may be a return to the 'buy good, buy once' approach that our grandparents used live by. Hold on to your trolley, it might become valuable?...compared to flat-packed stuff.
Have you seen that Ikea are now planning a buy-back scheme to re-purpose unwanted items - a response to the waste we are creating.
This does seem to be the recieved wisdom...
However anacdotally, I have a house full of "old brown furniture" and am (was should I say) surprised how diverse a range of guests all comment on how lovely it looks, and how they'd love to have "proper" furniture.
Don't worry, the cynic in me says this is more a calculated marketing ploy, but it is a start?I assumed the ikea scheme was essentially just a loyalty scheme / marketing ploy, they only buy back their own furniture as I understand, so it just helps to keep customers coming back for more. It did seem reasonable good value from what I recall.
I think there would have to quite a significant cultural shift towards quality, expensive products that last rather than flimsy products that are bright and fun, but only need to last a year or two at best. Not saying that would be a bad thing.
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