Anonymous wrote:I have an IKEA Hemnes bedroom suite that has survived 6 moves and still looks good. I’ve split up the pieces into different rooms in my current house and filled in with things from other places, including West Elm. I don’t assume any furniture is forever anymore, so I buy accordingly. West Elm is often far more expensive than it’s worth, but I do like their linens and browsing the store for ideas.
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.
Completely disagree. Same shoppers.
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.
Completely disagree. Same shoppers.
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.