Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless some posts were deleted I can't tell if people were being smug about having old furniture. They just stated they had it. The OP asked how long a bedroom set lasts. The answer is that they can last hundreds of years.
Like some posters I have "old brown furniture" because I inherited them. Hey, they were solid wood, excellent shape, classic designs, looks nice in my house and it was free!
Fashion goes in and out of style. Always has, always will. Many of us don't care and stick with what we like and enjoy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:15 to 20 years is enough for me. At that point I feel I've gotten my money's worth and might want to update, redecorate. lifetime furniture has absolutely no appeal to me, not sure why it is important to have the same furniture for your entire life - but that's just me. To each her own.
+1. What's the brag worthiness of having the same furniture for 50 years?
Complain all you want, but your grandparents' heavy brown furniture produced between 1850 and 1980 is not desirable. You literally have to pay people to haul it from your house because no one wants it right now. Check craigslist. People are selling their old, perfect condition solid wood bedroom sets for $150, but they'll sit there for months until they finally have to pay someone to drive it to salvation army for them.
It's fine if you like it and enjoy it. But I don't see why there is smugness in having old furniture solely for the sake of it being old.
This whole conversation reeks of smugness. People are definitely bragging about having old furniture and looking down on those with the old ("it may not be trendy, but it's better quality, and my grandmother got it as a wedding present in 1854, so it is clearly superior to buying something new!").
Anonymous wrote:Unless some posts were deleted I can't tell if people were being smug about having old furniture. They just stated they had it. The OP asked how long a bedroom set lasts. The answer is that they can last hundreds of years.
Like some posters I have "old brown furniture" because I inherited them. Hey, they were solid wood, excellent shape, classic designs, looks nice in my house and it was free!
Fashion goes in and out of style. Always has, always will. Many of us don't care and stick with what we like and enjoy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:15 to 20 years is enough for me. At that point I feel I've gotten my money's worth and might want to update, redecorate. lifetime furniture has absolutely no appeal to me, not sure why it is important to have the same furniture for your entire life - but that's just me. To each her own.
+1. What's the brag worthiness of having the same furniture for 50 years?
Complain all you want, but your grandparents' heavy brown furniture produced between 1850 and 1980 is not desirable. You literally have to pay people to haul it from your house because no one wants it right now. Check craigslist. People are selling their old, perfect condition solid wood bedroom sets for $150, but they'll sit there for months until they finally have to pay someone to drive it to salvation army for them.
It's fine if you like it and enjoy it. But I don't see why there is smugness in having old furniture solely for the sake of it being old.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:15 to 20 years is enough for me. At that point I feel I've gotten my money's worth and might want to update, redecorate. lifetime furniture has absolutely no appeal to me, not sure why it is important to have the same furniture for your entire life - but that's just me. To each her own.
+1. What's the brag worthiness of having the same furniture for 50 years?
Complain all you want, but your grandparents' heavy brown furniture produced between 1850 and 1980 is not desirable. You literally have to pay people to haul it from your house because no one wants it right now. Check craigslist. People are selling their old, perfect condition solid wood bedroom sets for $150, but they'll sit there for months until they finally have to pay someone to drive it to salvation army for them.
It's fine if you like it and enjoy it. But I don't see why there is smugness in having old furniture solely for the sake of it being old.
Anonymous wrote:15 to 20 years is enough for me. At that point I feel I've gotten my money's worth and might want to update, redecorate. lifetime furniture has absolutely no appeal to me, not sure why it is important to have the same furniture for your entire life - but that's just me. To each her own.
Anonymous wrote:One of the great men of American furniture design was Gustav Stickley who, in 1910 said:
"...I felt that the badly-constructed, over-ornate, meaningless furniture that was turned out in such quantities by the factories was not only bad in itself, but that its presence in the homes of the people was an influence that led directly away from sound qualities which make an honest man and a good citizen. It seemed to me that we were getting to be a thoughtless, extravagant people, fond of show and careless of real value, and that one way to counteract this national tendency was to bring about, if possible, a different standard of what was desirable in our homes."
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
As long as possible. Why it's important to get something classic, not trendy.
No such thing, except for certain antiques and even so "brown" furniture is out.
For me, until I'm sick of it.
Nonsense.
It is out. Look at high end auction prices, they have fallen for that type of furniture compared to 10-20 years ago. You can't give the cheaper stuff anyway because most people don't want it. Look at houzz, shelter mags, and design blogs. Or just keep saying nonsense. If you like it, great, but it isn't stylish.[/quote]
Yep. If you like it, great. It will be stylish again at some point. Trends come and go. What is important is if you like it. It's your house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as possible. Why it's important to get something classic, not trendy.
No such thing, except for certain antiques and even so "brown" furniture is out.
For me, until I'm sick of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as possible. Why it's important to get something classic, not trendy.
No such thing, except for certain antiques and even so "brown" furniture is out.
For me, until I'm sick of it.
Nonsense.
It is out. Look at high end auction prices, they have fallen for that type of furniture compared to 10-20 years ago. You can't give the cheaper stuff anyway because most people don't want it. Look at houzz, shelter mags, and design blogs. Or just keep saying nonsense. If you like it, great, but it isn't stylish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as possible. Why it's important to get something classic, not trendy.
No such thing, except for certain antiques and even so "brown" furniture is out.
For me, until I'm sick of it.
Nonsense.