J
John Larkin
Guest
On Tue, 21 Apr 2009 23:23:05 -0500, krw <krw@att.bizzzzzzzzzzz> wrote:
very nice workbench, except that they have discontinued it.
ftp://jjlarkin.lmi.net/DSC01371.JPG
The cabinet to the left is Ikea too. I like their office furniture
better than their home stuff, but it's all OK, and cheap.
We bought some Ikea stuff for the cabin in Truckee. We had to haul it
from Sacramanto, because there's not a single Ikea in Nevada.
Their swedish meatballs are pretty good.
Wood? All the way through?
John
We did our offices mostly in Ikea. This "computer workstation" makes aAnother example is the dominant furniture style: IKEA making slow inroads
against the standard velvety sofa http://www.homereserve.com/furn-
style.cfm?item=Sofa&sel=7
Hardly "dominant", but common and comfortable. We have all sorts of
furniture here, too. A lot of the Ikea stuff isn't comfortable.
IKEA certainly isn't dominant. In fact I've never seen it in anyone's
house. Perhaps it's ubiquitous in left lefty land but not the rest of
the country.
very nice workbench, except that they have discontinued it.
ftp://jjlarkin.lmi.net/DSC01371.JPG
The cabinet to the left is Ikea too. I like their office furniture
better than their home stuff, but it's all OK, and cheap.
We bought some Ikea stuff for the cabin in Truckee. We had to haul it
from Sacramanto, because there's not a single Ikea in Nevada.
Their swedish meatballs are pretty good.
This is a big country with a lot of variety. And there's nothing wrong
with tradition.
I prefer Ohio Amish built Mission style furniture, in Cherry.
http://www.greenacresfurniture.com/catalog/content/productcollection/?collection=118
...and it'll last longer than particle board with a picture of wood on
it.
Wood? All the way through?
John