Link please |
Those recliners are heavenly to sit in. I don't have 6k to spend on a chair though. |
I agree that the MCM fans in this thread aren’t showing any resiliency or strength of character. Glad you agree. Go cry into your Eames chair because someone on the internet thinks Eames chairs are ugly and are out of style now. |
I hate it when all the furniture is pushed up against the walls and there is a tiny rug floating under the coffee table. Good furniture placement and proportion can really make a difference, no matter what style. |
I’ve sat in these multiple times, and I disagree. They don’t work for anyone very tall, particularly anyone with long legs or broad shoulders. |
They come in different sizes actually. There is a tall version. |
I didn’t know, that’s interesting. Maybe that’s why it was so uncomfortable for me. But then does that mean it is really a chair for just one person in a house? I prefer furniture that can be shared in common areas, but perhaps it is a good chair for one person’s study. |
Right? Yikes. |
I'm 5'-2" and I can tell you there is no such thing as a chair or sofa that is comfortable for everyone. If you think there is, it's because you're tall and most furniture in the US is oversized by default. Chairs that are too high and too deep hurt my back and I have to pile pillows up just so I can sit down. |
True, but some are more accessible than others. A hard edge is harder to make commonly accessible than a softer edge, for instance. A seat that cups downward will be more generally worse than one that doesn’t require a push up to get out. |
OP here. Thanks for saying it better than I ever could! |
Glad someone beat me to it, I don't get this brand at all. Doing an address change has meant lots of furniture catalogs, plenty of which aren't my taste, but RH is an abomination on every page. |
Agree. |
Anything with sayings. "live, laugh, love" "gather" "patisserie" or "house rules"
We get it, you're a Maxxinista. |
I think the problem with MCM is that it got trendy and spawned so many cheap knock offs that’s what everyone thinks of. The original stuff is nice. I have a MCM dining table and coffee table but they don’t look like what has been sold as MCM. It is clean lines but not the extreme sharp edges and the soindly pointed legs. The dining room table has a dark stain. The coffee table is natural cherry but not orange tone—more the color of someone with medium brown hair. It’s very warm and a really good size (not too big but functional with a lower shelf, which was surprisingly hard to find when we considered replacing it).
It was the same problem with the oak antique reproductions in the 1980s. It was cheap oak so it looked cheap. Real quartersawn oak from the 1920s or earlier is gorgeous. Whenever something is trendy, it kills it because you get too saturated with the cheap versions. |