Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have been really into doing small projects in the house during COVID and interested in replacing some furniture. As “middle class” (defined broadly) people I do like shopping but am always cost conscious- most furniture is ikea, wayfair, world market... but i’m so drawn to west elm, anthropologie, etc.
I want to know how much to let myself splurge guilt-free... is it crazy to spend $500 on a coffee table or $3k on a new couch??
Are the people shopping at C&B and West Elm people like me, or do they have a lot more wealth? I was hoping to get a real understanding on this anonymous forum.
Stats for reference: 40-yr-old couple with 7&4 yr old kids, $250k hhi, $750k in retirement and college savings, $75k cash savings, save an additional $4k-ish a month after expenses.
Set a saving target, (1/3rd of gross for us ) and spend the rest. Travel, furniture, kids classes, great wines ..anything
Anonymous wrote:I have been really into doing small projects in the house during COVID and interested in replacing some furniture. As “middle class” (defined broadly) people I do like shopping but am always cost conscious- most furniture is ikea, wayfair, world market... but i’m so drawn to west elm, anthropologie, etc.
I want to know how much to let myself splurge guilt-free... is it crazy to spend $500 on a coffee table or $3k on a new couch??
Are the people shopping at C&B and West Elm people like me, or do they have a lot more wealth? I was hoping to get a real understanding on this anonymous forum.
Stats for reference: 40-yr-old couple with 7&4 yr old kids, $250k hhi, $750k in retirement and college savings, $75k cash savings, save an additional $4k-ish a month after expenses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your furniture needs to match your house. I can't justify putting cheap crap in a million dollar house. So if that's keepin' up with the Joneses, so be it. But cheap furniture screams house poor. Buy a house that you can afford to furnish and decorate properly.
OP here. This is a good point. We actually do live in a million dollar house but we’re not cash poor because we bought it a long time ago. So I guess in a way our status does not match our home or our neighborhood.
I've been in more than my fair share of million dollar homes in the DMV and I swear these homes and the neighborhood they're in aren't worthy of expensive furniture.
ha! this is so true!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your furniture needs to match your house. I can't justify putting cheap crap in a million dollar house. So if that's keepin' up with the Joneses, so be it. But cheap furniture screams house poor. Buy a house that you can afford to furnish and decorate properly.
OP here. This is a good point. We actually do live in a million dollar house but we’re not cash poor because we bought it a long time ago. So I guess in a way our status does not match our home or our neighborhood.
I've been in more than my fair share of million dollar homes in the DMV and I swear these homes and the neighborhood they're in aren't worthy of expensive furniture.
Anonymous wrote:I have been really into doing small projects in the house during COVID and interested in replacing some furniture. As “middle class” (defined broadly) people I do like shopping but am always cost conscious- most furniture is ikea, wayfair, world market... but i’m so drawn to west elm, anthropologie, etc.
I want to know how much to let myself splurge guilt-free... is it crazy to spend $500 on a coffee table or $3k on a new couch??
Are the people shopping at C&B and West Elm people like me, or do they have a lot more wealth? I was hoping to get a real understanding on this anonymous forum.
Stats for reference: 40-yr-old couple with 7&4 yr old kids, $250k hhi, $750k in retirement and college savings, $75k cash savings, save an additional $4k-ish a month after expenses.
Anonymous wrote:West Elm is barely better quality than IKEA, but C&B and PB are definitely better built furniture.
General rule of thumb, C&B and PB furniture is tongue and groove furniture, with solid wood veneers at least and delivered fully assembled. These pieces will last 40 years and multiple moves, no problem. Now the style may die, but the piece is built for the duration.
Wayfair (which is just a drop shipper), IKEA, are stuff you buy when you are young and poor. The furniture probably won’t survive a move, or if it does, you will need to glue some things back together.
We are done moving, but we have young kids so still have a LOT of IKEA, b/c the kids ruin everything, so need to wait till they are older before getting “investment” furniture.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your furniture needs to match your house. I can't justify putting cheap crap in a million dollar house. So if that's keepin' up with the Joneses, so be it. But cheap furniture screams house poor. Buy a house that you can afford to furnish and decorate properly.
OP here. This is a good point. We actually do live in a million dollar house but we’re not cash poor because we bought it a long time ago. So I guess in a way our status does not match our home or our neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:We have a ridiculous amount of money but I’m the ultimate bargain shopper. I’m happy to know we can outspend the Jones’s but we don’t need to do.