We are looking at getting a new fabric living room set - sofa, chair, ottoman. We have newborn twins so quality for a budget (2k) is a priority. The current set is JCPenney which apparently is Klaussner but died in 5 years. Any recommendations? Anything to avoid besides Ashley?
Thanks everybody!
You can have quality, or you can have cheap to buy, but you can't have both. $ 2k for a new sofa/chair/ottoman puts you squarely in the cheap group with the 5 year (or less) life span. You will have to double your budget to get into the better product lines. Good luck.
Duane Collie
Straight answers from thirty-six years in the business.
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A high quality new sofa is likely beyond your budget, unless you happen across some sort of incredible sale. An alternative is a consignment shop; the best ones have some amazing bargains. Find the sofa first, then pick up the colors in the rest of the room design. If I had newborn twins, this is what I would do-- since there will be a lot of spills in the next few years.
I think I'd rather have a new sofa with a limited lifespan rather than something used and potentially germ-filled especially with new-borns. There are many homes that are pet free, smoke free, bug free, and clean but buying a consignment store special comes with uncertainty about the piece's history that I wouldn't be willing to accept. I'd buy used case goods but never upholstery.
Furniture isn't "germ free." Your home isn't "germ free." The wider world isn't "germ free." Your own skin is not "germ free." Your gut is one solid mass of "germs," that's largely how your food is digested.
The factory where your new sofa would be made is run by human beings who are not "germ free." The warehouse and delivery people are not "germ free." Buy new or buy used, you get "germs."
The kids are going to be exposed to all sorts of "germs" just by being around people. You are also picking up "germs" every time you go to the store, to work, to church. Not only is this something that can't be avoided, it's not something you want to avoid, because it prevents the kids' immune system from developing properly. In any case, the kids will be going through the drool, barf, poop, and food flinging stages, so soon you'll have lots and lots of germs multiplying everywhere!
Seriously, don't worry about it. And congratulations.