I’m sorry in advance if this question is out of line for this sub!
I would like to be a grownup and furnish my house with something that won’t wear out or fall apart within a couple years. Specifically I need a couple couches and a couple comfortable chairs for a living room and rec/TV room.
I’m so tired of buying furniture that looks nice for 6 months and then sags/breaks/falls apart or gets so uncomfortable we stop using it. Everyone I know buys their furniture at IKEA/Costco/Wayfair and it’s complete garbage in 5 years, or they had an interior designer work on the house and they have no idea where she/he got the items.
What are some high quality furniture brands or stores for me to look?
ETA budget could be up to $20,000 for the right pieces. If it’s something really expensive I can just save up a little longer.
Edit 2: I’m located in southern Minnesota if that helps.
Hey all, so I’ve just leveled up and bought my first house. Because of that, I now have little to no furniture or much money to buy some with. I want to find some decent quality furniture brands that are somewhere between the price range of IKEA and Pottery Barn.
Any and all recommendations/testimonies on what to buy and what to avoid are appreciated.
Thanks!
EDIT: Thanks for all the responses! I wish I could respond to all of them, but trust me I’m reading and researching as many as I can. Love this sub
Videos
The point of this post is to explore the many online furniture retailers at various different price points and different styles. This thread will grow more organized with time, and will be continuously stickied here at r/LivingSpaceSales for the time being. Better descriptions of every store will come with time as well.
For now I am only organizing this list into two different styles: Traditional, and Modern furniture. I will certainly have more options for Modern furniture for now, as that is the style I am best versed in, and know most of the stores of. I also think that is far more popular among reddit's demographic.
For now I am only very vaguely listing the price range for each website. $ is for budget furniture, not too much more or less pricey than your average ikea. Generally items are between $100-1000. $$ is for low-end midrange and high mid-range, around the $500-2000 range. Starting at your typical West Elm at Mid-Low, or Crate and Barrel maybe towards Mid-High. A step above in terms of quality and price from Ikea level brands, or maybe even 2 steps above. $$$ is for exclusively high-end furniture. Think of websites that sell iconic furniture like the eames lounge chair (eg. Herman Miller) and the nelson bench, that quality and price range.
Finally, please recommend any hidden and reputable sellers you may know of online. For now I am only collecting Furniture stores, any website must sell furniture not just Decor. I want this list to always be growing.
Finally, let's begin the list.
MODERN FURNITURE
Tier $
IKEA (Scandinavian/Minimalist)
Amazon Rivet (Mid Century Modern)
Structube (US/CA) (Mid Century/Modern)
World Market (Industrial/World)
Urban Outfitters (Modern)
Target Home (Mixed)
Muji (Minimalism)
Zinus (Mattresses/Beds/Sofas)
Nathan James (Modern/Boho)
Poly & Bark (Mid Century Modern, Almost $$)
Tier $$
Scandinavian Designs (Scandinavian/Sale items could be considered $)
West Elm (Modern Mixed/Sale items could be considered $)
Article (Midcentury Modern)
CB2 (Mostly Modern/Sale items could be considered $)
Crate & Barrel (Some Modern)
Room & Board (Mostly Modern)
APT2B (Modern)
Joybird (Customizable)
Manhattan Home Design (Mid-Century/Replicas)
Rove Concepts (New takes on Iconic Design/Almost $$$)
Capsule Home (Modern)
Blu Dot (Midcentury Modern)
EQ3 (US/CA) (MidCentury/Modern)
Tier $$$
Design Within Reach (Iconic Mid Century Modern)
Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) Home Store (Where the Furniture is the Art/Iconic)
Herman Miller (Mid Century Modern/Producer of Eames Lounge Chair)
Hive Modern (Modern)
Restoration Hardware Modern (Some Modern)
Rejuvenation (Mostly Modern)
TRADITIONAL
Tier $
Ashley Home Store
Raymour & Flanigan
Bob's Discount Furniture
Costco
Target (Some Traditional)
Amazon Stone & Beam
Pier 1 (Some $)
Macys (Some $)
Tier $$
Macys (Some $$)
Pier 1
Crate & Barrel
Pottery Barn
Bassett Furniture
L.L. Bean
Ballard Designs
Tier $$$
Restoration Hardware
Ethan Allen
Arhaus
Ralph Lauren Home
William Sonoma Home
Bloomingdale's Home
MULTIPLE BUDGETS/MULTIPLE STYLES
Wayfair
AllModern
Houzz
Joss & Main
Birch Lane
Hay Needle
Walmart
Thanks Again for Reading! Please comment your hidden finds online, and hopefully this list will make it easier for anyone shopping furniture online! If you have any experiences with any of these brands, either positive or negative, be sure to comment as well!
Edit: I cross posted this on r/MaleLivingSpace to hopefully more eyes on this guide: https://www.reddit.com/r/malelivingspace/comments/ajf7b7/the_ultimate_guide_to_online_furniture_stores/
Edit 2: also cross-posted to r/FemaleLivingSpace https://www.reddit.com/r/femalelivingspace/comments/ajfxai/the_ultimate_guide_to_online_furniture_stores/? :)
Edit 3: Added more stores! We now have a list of over 50 unique online furniture retailers!
Hello from our friends at r/MaleLivingSpace & r/FemaleLivingSpace!
We are in the NYC metro area and are looking for the highest quality (but moderately priced) brands or makers these days…so many of the “heritage” or mass market brands aren’t made like they used to be. Even IKEA has discontinued some classics!
I’ve looked at DWR, RH, Pottery Barn, Crate and Barrel, Arhaus, extensively at the online brands like Joybird, Article etc. We’ve had uneven experiences with Lovesac, Ballard Designs, Cost Plus, and even the Maiden Home custom couches we love from five years ago now have a lot of bad reviews for quality control.
Where are you finding furniture that’s made to last/made like it “used to be?” Budget is more than IKEA but less than Ligne Roset…looking more for value and longevity worth investing a little more in, but doesn’t break the bank! I’d like to replace some of the items we’ve had for a while but don’t want to buy disposable pieces we need to replace down the line. Would love any wisdom/experience besides looking for vintage pieces.
I’m looking for BiFPL furniture, but actually affordable. From searching around on here, most are unaffordable.
I’m looking for a living room set or sectional, but not for $5k+. Give me some good value brands please!
Hello! I’m currently in the process of slowly refurbishing my NYC apartment, and I’d love your advice.
What are some furniture brands that build quality pieces but don’t cost a ton. I’m interested in mid century modern mostly. And right now I’m looking for a writing desk around $500–$800.
Basically, I’m looking for the Everlane of furniture design. A company that delivers quality, basic items at a fair price. Any advice is greatly appreciated!
There's nothing in that price range that achieves what this sub would qualify as "BIFL" if only because modern furniture manufacture isn't made to last forever, it's made to be cheap.
The best values are going to be used furniture, but it takes some knowledge to understand what is or isn't the real deal in a CL ad or estate sale, making it risky. I will say that office furniture is surprisingly easy to find secondhand in good condition--be it conference tables, office chairs, desks, or files. Plenty of BK'd businesses liquidating assets...
In new home furniture I feel like there are definitely quality/value flights depending on who's the target market. IME, the quality flights are as such:
Tier 1 - College Dorm
-
IKEA, Ashley, Target, Walmart
Tier 2 - Starter House
-
Wayfair, Costco (crapshoot - sometimes OK, sometimes rebadged Ashley), Poundex / Furniture of America, Pottery Barn / Crate & Barrel,
Tier 3 - Almost quality, definitely paying for it
-
Thomasville (Tier 3 prices, Tier 2 quality), West Elm (basically upmarket crate & barrel), HD Buttercup, Restoration Hardware, Ethan Allen
Tier 4 - Actual "Good" furniture
-
Stanley, Stickley, Sherrill, Hooker, Bernhardt, Lexington, anything actually made by the Amish
Right now, I think West Elm is making the hardest push to claim Mid Century as their calling card and should fit your price range. Unsure of actual quality of their MCM pieces, but definitely higher than Ikea/Target level furniture. I did order a big old couch from WE on Black Friday. I'll receive it next month. My office couch is also from WE and it's a decent piece of furniture.
At the top of the ladder, there's still some more value speciation to be had. I get chuffed at the idea of paying "Solid Oak" prices for veneered MDF--but even in the most expensive brands of furniture, I'd say a lot of them are doing exactly that, which makes an artisan (be it an Amish guy or someone in North Carolina, where solid wood furniture is somehow cheap and good) crafting furniture to spec the best way to know you're paying for what you're getting--but who has time for that???
Look up lane, broyhill, plycraft, DWR, Herman miller, and knoll on aptdeco.com, they have good prices and will deliver.
Housing works on 23rd has great donations of very good quality MCM and post on their website the better pieces. Off the Bedford L and into Greenpoint there are a bunch of smaller vintage shops with good collections.
Edit:. Missed the part about Everlane. For the price point you are looking at you're left with Wayfair, which is a lot of veneered particle board. There's a restoration hardware outlet just on the other side of the GW that if you caught them at a sale you could maybe find some new pieces in your budget.
My 2 cents is that if you want MCM the best way to get great quality is to buy original antiques.
My life has really leveled up in the last few years and my husband and I are looking for some high quality, durable, buy it for life type furniture.
We do have a bit of a budget available, so I'm interested in items we can invest in knowing they'll be with us for the long haul. Obviously affordable pieces are a bonus, but if something is a few hundred dollars more that isn't a deal breaker if it will last.
Specifically we're looking for a bed frame, bonus points if it's capable of supporting a fair amount of weight as we're both heavy. We're also interested in a dining room set and a new couch after the bedframe.
Oh, and some decent bookshelves!
Thank you in advance for the help! We've never been in a position to buy anything but the cheapest option before and we're excited to stop replacing things every few years with more cheap crap.
What brand is worth the price premium?
I'm looking for a TV stand. It seems like all the websites I find are either in the $100-$300 range (Amazon, Wayfair), or $1000+ (West Elm, Room & Board, Sundays). Where are the mid-range options, in the $400-700 range?
I've had the same experience with multiple furniture items. Its either super-cheap particle board and glue, or its $1200+.
What are your favorite brands or websites for mid-price furniture—the stuff that's still affordable, but a bit higher-quality?
Looking to purchase new furniture for our home. The last set we bought from a discount place and they’re just garbage after 3 years.
I’d like to get 2 leather couches and a chair.
I know furniture isn’t truly bifl, but how bout 10 years at least?
Theres a store in our area that has 40% off England furniture. Is this stuff any good? Any discussion or recommendations is appreciated!
I'm a FTHB looking to furnish my place and I'm ready to move on from your typical Ikea/target furniture. My issue is that I feel like a lot of stuff is either cheap, designer/high end, or if it seems like a nice middle-ground, it's actually just cheap mass produced MDF junk. Even just sorting by only solid wood doesn't seem to always do it since the construction can be lousy.
Are there any brands that are known for being good, sturdy, quality furniture, that aren't considered luxuryand high end? I don't really care if it looks basic, as I'm more interested in making my place look nice with art from family and locals, but I just want a nice base of like a dining set, dresser, and a couple other things to fill in the gaps for what I haven't been able to thrift.
I basically only know of IKEA and the few other major furniture companies, but looking to expand my search. What brands do you fancy and why? (Bonus points for affordablitiy!)
Started over after divorce, Thuma, Article, Burrow, West Elm, Crate and barrel, for most of the stuff, wanted a little nicer than IKEA without breaking the bank, even Wayfair for some odds and ends
If we’re talking about affordability I’d recommend Facebook marketplace or Craigslist
Hi everyone, we're settling into our first home. We're looking for a sofa set. The designs I like are found in outdoor furniture these days. Something like this:
Clara by Ashley
Baela by Joss & Main
Patio daybed by Birch and Lane
But I've heard these companies have terrible quality and customer service. I'd like to buy furniture for life. My grandmother used to have furniture like that in her house that withstood almost 50+ years until she gave it away.
I have the same mentality. To buy for life. Are there any quality companies that make Sofas and Chairs like these that I could buy from? We're in the Unites States East coast.
Edit:
With reviews, advice, and suggestions from people. I've shifted my taste a bit. I'm looking into something like a combo of Plinth Sofa + Ottomon now. Something like:
Neptune By Article
Harmony by West Elm
Tidal By Crate & Barrel
Edit No.2:
I eventually settled on a sofa from HomeGoods. It was a worthy discard from a North Carolina based custom Sofa company. God decent solid wood. And beige color.
I got the Table and Chairs from Habitat from Humanity restores. Got a decent Wraught Iron set. I changed my taste a lot to save money.
In the market for a new dining table. The Ashley tables at the local superstore seem suspiciously cheap, and I’m not throwing down $15k for a set of Stickley anytime soon.
The Amish-built items come to mind, but even those can also get up there in price.
Any suggestions for a well-built, solid table and chair set that won’t completely destroy my bank account?
I am looking to purchase a home this year or next, and as we furnish the house we would like to upgrade our furniture from ikea/wayfair/amazon items to quality pieces that last.
Other than article, crate and barrel, and pottery barn, I am at a loss as to where people actually shop for furniture. Would love some recs!
Hi! Not sure if this is the right sub to ask this, but me and my wife just bought a house and are currently trying to do the interior decorating ourselves. My wife's really into interior decorating and is very particular with the furniture pieces she wants to use. She said she wants a clean, bright aesthetic with some luxurious-looking furniture. We tried looking around (Ikea, Wayfair, Walmart, and other big name stores) but can't find anything we like (plus we're not sure about their quality as some of the reviews online are either bad or just "meh"). We're now thinking of having customized ones but we know it'll be costly.
If any of you know other good quality furniture brands that offer pieces that match the aesthetic we're going for, please let me know. I want the customized furniture to be our last resort. Thanks very much!
EDIT: So my wife found a couple of pieces from Castlery. She said they're exactly what she's looking for, and honestly, I'm not even complaining. They actually look nice and sturdy.
seems like once a month there's a post in here about how bad west elm is and if there are any alternatives. i thought i'd share my list of stores and let people add theirs on too.
first, a few notes:
the best store is your local one
there's probably something nearby that has great, interesting furniture. maybe it's a designer boutique, maybe it's a consignment store — look there first. support your local economy. get interesting things. reuse if you can. check craiglist and your local buy othing group!
wayfair and its subsidiaries
wayfair is rapidly turning into the amazon of the furniture world: occasional gems with mostly a ton of junk. it's usually not worth your time to dig through all the crap. wayfair runs a number of other sites that are more or less the same: allmodern, joss and main, birch lane, and perigold.
i think allmodern and perigold are pretty well-curated, but pay attention to things there and make sure you always follow the golden rule:
if the price seems too good to be true, IT IS
designer furniture is expensive. if you find something that's significantly less expensive than it normally is, it's probably not the real deal. that may be okay with you! but consider whether or not your budget would be better spent on something different that isn't pretending to be something it's not.
THE LIST
i've arranged these by my rough estimate of cost and tried to tag them with general style vibes.
price vibes:
$: ikea, target
$$: blu dot, crate and barrel
$$$: room and board
$$$$: restoration hardware, design within reach
$$$$$: prices not listed on the website (you know what that means)
57st. design: $$–$$$ minimal, simple. (check out their cool refurbished program)
akron street: $$ midcentury, contemporary, simple
apt2b: $$–$$$ contemporary, midcentury
artemide: $$$ lighting
article: $$–$$$ midcentury, contemporary
blu dot: $$ contemporary, trendy, simple
boconcept $$–$$$ contemporary, minimal, scandinavian
boxhill: $$–$$$ contemporary
cb2: $$–$$$ trendy
chairish: $$–$$$$$ vintage, consignment
crate and barrel: $$ contemporary, trendy
design within reach: $$$$ simple, midcentury, trendy
dwell store: $$–$$$ midcentury, trendy, simple
eq3: $$ contemporary, trendy, scandinavian
everything but the house: $–$$$$ vintage, consignment
hollis+morris: $$$$ lighting, minimal, simple
faithful roots: $$$$ simple, minimal
ferm living: $$$ trendy, scandinavian
finnish design shop: $$–$$$$ trendy, midcentury, scandinavian
gantri: $–$$ lighting, minimal
hay: $$ trendy, minimal, scandinavian
hive modern: $$–$$$$ contemporary, trendy, midcentury, retailer
jacob may: $$$–$$$$ simple, minimal
joybird: $$–$$$ custom, contemporary, midcentury
kettal: $$$$$ trendy, midcentury
kroft: $ minimal, simple
mitchell gold + bob williams: $$$ midcentury, contemporary
modernica: $$–$$$ midcentury
modloft: $$$–$$$$ contemporary, clean, minimal
muji: $ japanese, minimal
muuto: $$–$$$ scandinavian
novogratz: $$–$$$ classic, contemporary
room and board: $$$ contemporary, midcentury
rove concepts: $$$–$$$$ contemporary, scandinavian
schoolhouse: $$$ lighting, classic
soho home: $$$–$$$$ contemporary, trendy, classic
stillfried-wien: $$$$ midcentury
target project 62: midcentury
umbra: $–$$ simple, scandinavian
urban barn: $$ contemporary, industrial, minimal
ylighting: $$–$$$$$ lighting, midcentury, trendy, contemporary
u/plumrose333 further suggests:
arhaus
lulu and georgia
poly and bark
serena and lily
Hi all,
I wanted to crowdsource a BIFL furniture tier list for the big brands out there
Categories are S through F
Some brands that come to mind are: Crate & Barrel, CB2, West Elm, Restoration Hardware, Wayfair, Ikea, Pottery Barn, Apt2B, AllModern, Room & Board, Anthropologie, Castlery, Maiden Home, Design Within Reach...
The way this could work is, post a comment placing a brand in a category (preferably a rating that comes from personal experience) with a short description as to why, and I'll update the master sheet here with the ratings. If two or more Redditors rate the same brand, I'll go with the rating with the higher upvotes.
I'll start, Ikea - F tier, it's obvious that the already low standards at Ikea have drooped to even new lows. My last trip to an Ikea showroom I was astounded by how much their furniture now just feels so bad and yet isn't that cheap either. In the past I had a MALM bed ages ago, that thing lasted like a decade, I think the Ikea of the early 00's was actually decent but today it's just glue and twigs.
S - Dania, Moss Designs, Carl Hansen & Søn, PP Møbler, Fredericia Furniture, House of Finn Juhl, Getama, Snedkergården, Flexform
A - Louis Poulsen, Fritz Hansen, Ethan Allen, La-Z-Boy, Herman Miller, Eames, Knoll
B - Mantle
C - Ashley
D
F - Ikea