| I still have the Ethan Allen dining room set that belonged to my parents and ut still looks great. That said, I didn't know they switched to china. I have recent stuff from them, holding up well year 6, but in a formal living room so not too much wear and tear. |
| we've had great luck with our furniture from Arhaus. |
| A second for Arhaus furniture. has held up very well through two kids, dog, pillow forts, trampoline practice, etc.! |
| I have regretted buying furniture from PB. It does not hold up well. Try Belfort in Dulles. It is a large furniture warehouse, prices are very competitive. Another place like Belfort is Green Front. |
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I hear how other people are happy with Ethan Allen, and I seethe, because I don't understand how I got so royally screwed by them. I got a dining room table and chairs, and it was a disaster, both in terms of quality and customer service. Buying was unpleasant, in short. Then the quality problems started within weeks of delivery (dents appeared all over the place, screws falling out), and they were incredibly rude and dismissive when I called for help. I like their designs a lot but will never go back.
I've bought numerous things from Room and Board (2 beds, 2 nightstands, a sectional couch, ottoman, two lamps, an area rug) and have been 100% happy with the quality and customer service from them. |
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100% wood made the old fashioned way:
http://www.duckloe.com/ More in catalogues than on line. A favorite solid wood US manufacturer of mine closed. |
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I bought a lot of Room & Board furniture about 9-10 years ago and it's all held up really well. In fact, I'm feeling guilty because we need to replace the dining room table and the sofa due to growth of our family (furniture was purchased when I was single, now I'm a mom of 4 and we don't all fit!), but the furniture is still in such great shape that I feel like it's wasteful to move on to something else.
That said - it's not inexpensive. But it has really held up well. (Bed frame, dressers, huge desk, dining table and chairs, end tables, armoire, sofa, leather chairs - all still going strong.) |
I second that. I bought based on past quality and reputation and I am dissatisfied. Finish on wood is not wearing well after five years. |
I'm the first poster in this quote -- I also have stuff that we bought in the last few years (2008) since my son was born. All just fine and still holding up. I'm about to go this weekend and finally complete the bedroom set (never bought a bed -- first time in my life I'LL have a big girl bed -- always just had mattress on frame) But I totally accept that you guys got bad stuff. Maybe this line is still made in the US (I think it might be, if I remember what's engraved inside the drawer). |
+1 |
| You may want to look at consignment/antique stores for antique furniture. I have a beautiful Chippendale dining room set I bought for nothing (about $1k for table, leaf, and 6 chairs). I would start looking around. It was totally worth it. High quality solid wood for much less than current fiber board/particle board pieces. |
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One more idea to throw into the mix; you could get unfinished furniture and pick and/or stain it yourself:
http://www.saahfurniture.com/products.php?catid=1335&category=Dining:Tables:Tables:Tables |
I like Haverty's. Had good luck with Stanis furniture,don't know if they are still around. |
| Really like Stanley furniture. Also try Stoffers in Baltimore, HUGE selection and good sales. |
| Pottery barn is made in china crap. |