185 points

Confirmation bias: all the shite furniture from 1800s has rotted to dust already

Edit for full disclosure: I’ve exclusively bought antique furniture. I’m basically a shill for big-auction

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116 points

I think it’s survivorship bias, but yes

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35 points

Sure. A lot has rotted away, but much modern furniture is designed with so much MDF and other manufactured wood products that aren’t resilient in the least. Moisture will destroy them, they take gashes super easy, and are soft wood.

I’d think the furniture our grandparents had would be more likely to have been solid wood.

That’s not to say there aren’t solid hardwood pieces being made today. But they are extremely expensive and are competing in a space with poor regulation of descriptions and all the flat pack Chinese imported stuff thats literally 10% of the price of good furniture that will last.

Solid hardwood furniture is a luxury.

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7 points

Balsa is hardwood Yew is softwood

Yew is 16x stronger

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6 points

I bought a modern well made dresser from some exotic wood, cost me roughly €900 amd it got damaged after moving but i haven’t taken the time to repair it as it’s only visual.

That thing is solid af, it has more hidden supports than it needs. I could probably park a car on top and it would withstand the weight. (Obv. i haven’t tested that lol)

We went shopping for a tv cabinet and 99% turned out to be particle board but they still had the audacity to charge between €1200 and €1800 euro’s.

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3 points

Yea. It’s really bad looking for something online. They may be under the “solid wood” category for material, but they still are 90% particle board.

I prefer spending extra knowing that I’ll have something for decades and not have to replace it in a year or two. Fortunately for me, about 80% of my homes furniture is from Habitat for Humanity. They are fantastic for having a good selection of quality stuff for cheap. Some might need a little repair, but they tend to only accept decent stuff in the first place.

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3 points

I saw a headline that Ikea was considering a rental program because there’s a cultural understanding that flat packed* furniture especially that made of veneered chipboard is disposable.

And yeah at least Ikea puts in some effort to make their furniture decent. Much of what you find at retailers is just chip board shit, bookcases that’ll collapse under the weight of actual books, etc.

My strategy is, I’m a woodworker. I’m slowly replacing anything cheap and crap in my life with oak, cherry and walnut.

*had to correct myself from saying flatpak there, Linux has me trained.

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2 points

Ikea has a lot of chip board furniture but they also have some decent solid wood furniture for a good price.

It’s usually pine but still for the price it’s a decent quality furniture that could last for a good time in good condition.

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1 point

I just moved into a house a couple years ago. While I’m mostly getting used furniture, I’m slowly looking into making my own and learning to repair what’s out there.

I’m really bad at staining or painting. I never feel like what I do comes out even.

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17 points

Same with old appliances.

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12 points

And old cars…

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6 points

And old people

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9 points

Also the one from their grandma cost 3 months wage at the time and they probably got it as their wedding gift. Totally comparable to 25$ worth of composite 👍

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2 points

Part of the problem with those antique pieces is that they’re a bitch to move.

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88 points

Here’s a picture of the furniture my grandparents left me:

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22 points

Nice floor tho

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16 points

My grandparents didn’t even update their will when my sister and I were born.

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27 points

Neither did my grandparents. Likewise, my parents didn’t update their will when my children and nieces were born.

The attitude among all generations has been: your own kids inherit, and they distribute to their kids as they see fit.

I wasn’t in my grandparents wills, but I ended up with some of their furniture.

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3 points

If you actually have good parents, there is no need to. Unless you’re over 18 the money typically goes to your parents anyway.

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2 points

What’s a will?

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3 points

A whole a house or just this room?

Anyway: Amazing.

All I got was the IKEA family card. Free coffee. Yeah.

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86 points

One thing for sure, is way easier to carry

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47 points

And dust

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3 points

easier to use too

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85 points
*

If cheap furniture made by compressing glue and sawdust together existed 100 years ago, I bet it would have sold well.

Same goes for shoes. Everyone’s wearing terrible plastic stuff nowadays.

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34 points
*
Removed by mod
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3 points

I wonder why simple shoes (like a piece of wood and some cord) picked up in the East but not in the West.

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5 points

They were picked up in the West as well, but not as well known probably because they weren’t viewed as fashionable. They’re called Pattens FYI

Patten (shoe) - Wikipedia - https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patten_(shoe)

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2 points

Dutch are known for their wooden clogs, no?

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16 points

My grandparents deliberately saved up for the expensive oak furniture. It was meant to last the rest of their lives (which it did). They had a different mindset than me and you who want something nice looking that doesn’t burden the bank account too much

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39 points

That and I didn’t want to buy solid oak furniture when I lived in apartments and had to move on a dime because the landlord wanted to jack up rent or pull something… Again.

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6 points

People bought mail order houses, which I think confirms the popularity of lightweight and portable big purchase items.

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4 points

Chipboard was one of those things invented twice simultaneously during WWII, as the Germans and Americans looked around for resources to exploit and noticed the massive amounts of sawdust they had piling up. Chipboard cabinetry and furniture starts to emerge in the 1950’s. Ikea was founded in 1943 and started selling furniture in 1948. So cheap particle board furniture existed ~80 years ago, and did indeed sell well.

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83 points

Im leaving my grandkids a very cleanly optimized starter base in Factorio.

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7 points

That’s very thoughtful.

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7 points

That’s an amazing gift

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