Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting as I would never group the two together. I see West Elm as mid-century, lots of color and texture, textiles. I see Ikea as an adult version of Legos. It has its place and purpose but the Ikea shopper is not a West Elm shopper. At all.
Hmmm. I disagree. Plenty of people that I know go to both.
Yeah, a lot of IKEA stuff fits the modern, minimalist vibe. I know someone who has a lot of mid-century modern, and mixes in IKEA pieces, too. They blend just fine.
Anonymous wrote:Ok, what do people think about this table: https://www.westelm.com/products/mid-century-expandable-dining-table-round-h4230/?pkey=cdining-tables
vs this one: https://www.roomandboard.com/catalog/dining-and-kitchen/tables/ventura-round-extension-tables#power-reviews-tabs
Is the extra thousand dollars worth it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting as I would never group the two together. I see West Elm as mid-century, lots of color and texture, textiles. I see Ikea as an adult version of Legos. It has its place and purpose but the Ikea shopper is not a West Elm shopper. At all.
Hmmm. I disagree. Plenty of people that I know go to both.
Anonymous wrote:Interesting as I would never group the two together. I see West Elm as mid-century, lots of color and texture, textiles. I see Ikea as an adult version of Legos. It has its place and purpose but the Ikea shopper is not a West Elm shopper. At all.
Anonymous wrote:Interesting as I would never group the two together. I see West Elm as mid-century, lots of color and texture, textiles. I see Ikea as an adult version of Legos. It has its place and purpose but the Ikea shopper is not a West Elm shopper. At all.
Anonymous wrote:Interesting as I would never group the two together. I see West Elm as mid-century, lots of color and texture, textiles. I see Ikea as an adult version of Legos. It has its place and purpose but the Ikea shopper is not a West Elm shopper. At all.