Hello.
I've been a lurker for years- back years ago when I purchased my first 'grown up' furniture in graduate school I read Duane's helpful notes on gardenweb. I'm now on the hunt again for some upholstered pieces and find myself as overwhelmed as I was back then. Over the next year, I am looking for two sofas (formal living room & den) and several armchairs and a cocktail ottoman. I have been saving for a while. I know this will be a major purchase. Last time, I ended up with a Michael Thomas sofa in our formal living room and I have been pleased with it. Cushions are in great shape (spring-down/ down blend back) and the frame is solid- It is in such great condition I feel guilty buying a new sofa. I would consider re-covering it but I really want a different style. I would even consider them again because I at least know how their product "sits" over time but they don't have anything that fits my vision. So I am starting this research process over.

Basically what I *really* want for the main living room sofa is this: a two over two with a t cushion seat (spring down), box back cushions, 84in long, approx 39 deep--- and here's the kicker detail: with a small Lawson arm (~ 7in wide) and a high kick-pleat skirt (~10in true dressmaker skirt, not 9, not 7 inches and not waterfall)... in a linen or linen blend. I'm okay with COM if need be though I think it would be more cost effective to find a fabric with the line. I would also like for the sofa to have nice pitch. And a normal seat height.

Apparently I am the queen of custom because it seems like almost no one makes this sofa. Several companies come close- Hickory Chair comes close. All but the skirt. They will do 9 inches only. But one thing I really like about HC is the pitch of the back of their sofas in the Silhouettes line. The pitch makes them feel a little less stuffy and traditional and a little more fresh. Also they will do a by the inch length which is nice because I am kind of Goldilocks on the length. I was close to ordering but with the FBI post bankruptcy in flux situation, I am just hesitant. I looked at Hickory White and considered changing my arm to English because I liked their overall tailoring. But I do hate to basically compromise on just about everything... I'd end up with an English arm and a waterfall skirt with Hickory White.

One company has EXACTLY the sofa I envision- great pitch, lovely proportions and appropriate scale for my 1920s house- THIBAUT. Yes, Thibaut. Which is private label to designers (no one in a 100 mile radius that I can find and probably out of my price range if I could find somebody!) Turns out the new version of Southwood makes Thibaut's furniture... (I thought they were kaput?!) My mother had lots of Southwood (circa 1990s) and it was nice. No idea if that is still the case under new ownership.

Frustrated I returned to Duane's forum and saw Taylor King come up again and again so I started researching them and I feel good about their construction and YES they have lots of fabrics... they also have one sofa that looks close to my ideal vision with just some minor modification.

But can somebody give me a 101 on Taylor King? I had never heard of them before reading this forum. The closest dealer is more than an hour away. When I do a dealer search on their webpage it looks like they are carried by smallish (maybe boutique?) shops. I am a couple of hours from Hickory and the Furniture Mart is listed as a dealer so I can travel there though I would prefer to shop more locally. But if I decide to go with TK, I'll have to travel.

Anyway, I'd just love to know a bit more- are they a small company? are they good about honoring their warranty? will they make modifications? (i.e will they add a 10 in skirt to a standard naked leg model and change a 3 cushion to a 2?)

The situation with NC manufacturers makes me sad. So many good folks without jobs. I understand the recession really took a toll and it seems that many in my generation (and the younger ones) really do have a 'buy it for today' kind of mind-set. I want to buy NC and want to support a good company. In turn, I'd like to feel reasonably confident that the company will still exist if I need replacement cushions or some kind of warranty service down the road- is this a realistic expectation?


Thank you!