Showing posts with label ikea furniture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ikea furniture. Show all posts

Sunday, September 14, 2008

SUPER DEALS AT TOYSRUS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!





I believe it is important that we share our recent discovery of sales, coupons,hot websites with great deals, so keep checking back for coupons and links from ToysRus, IKEA , CB2, and other retailers.





Great Gift Ideas from Toys R Us and Babies R Us
Toys R Us
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Shop This Week's Super Deals
Free $20 Gift Card With Purchase of Star Wars: The Force Unleashed In-Store Only!
The Force Unleashed Game
25% Off Battle Packs
Starfighter Vehicle
Star Wars LEGO: The Twilight
NEW First Act Sounds!
Save $20 on First Act
5 Piece Jr. Drum Set
Save $5 on Speed Racer
Movie Moments Track Set!
30% Off ALL Fisher-Price
Infant Toys!*
40% Off ALL Berenguer Dolls
25% Off CD Boomboxes
Click here for Safety Information
*Fisher-Price offer excludes Baby Gear, Sesame Street, Pooh, Dora, Diego, Backyardigans, Wonder Pets & Disney. Selection varies by store. Limited quantities available. Sorry, no rain checks. Infant toys are ages newborn to 12 months. TOYS"R"US RAIN CHECK POLICY: It is our intention to have every advertised item in stock at our stores. Should certain items be unavailable, we will gladly issue you a rain check at your request. Rain checks do not apply to special offers, limited supply items which are available only while supplies last or items available online or by telephone. We reserve the right to limit quantities.

**GIFT CARD: Limit one per guest. Gift Card valid on your next visit and expires 10/31/08, except where prohibited. See back of card for Terms and Conditions. Limited quantities available. Sorry, no rain checks.

Please add toysrus@toysrus.rsys1.com to your address book to ensure delivery of future sales and special offers.

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NYC Furniture Assembly

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Saturday, September 13, 2008

5 easy tips to assemble IKEA furniture

know what you thinking: she must having a slow day today. ;D Actually , no. I just heard another customer complained about how difficult it is to assemble IKEA furniture and how much they hate it. (But they are still browsing in the store to see what they can buy! :)) ) Well, a little extra help will never hurt.

If you are a IKEA newbie, I won’t be surprised that you screw up your first piece of furniture. I know I did and I know my hubby did too. My very first piece was Billy book case. Simple enough. I thought I read the instruction careful enough to ensure the success. Nope! I was wrong. I put the shelf backwards and have one ugly unfinished side on the front. The worst part was I didn’t realize that until I put the back on and almost announced success.

Well, that was then…

So I thought, let’s share some insight with newbies and hopefully no one will ever have to return a messed up Billy book case ever again. ;)

1. Open packing carefully with facing all unfinished side one way.
It is rather easy to tell if a piece has some unfinished side. I found it a lot easier to help me create the vision rather than look at the pictures and trying to find out what hole suppose to go where.

2. Also, put sort out similar pieces and group them together.
Not only it help you to understand the pictures better, it also make the pile look smaller and you don’t make a mess in your room. Do the same thing with hardwares so you can easily find what you need when assembling.

3. Read the instruction
Take some time and actually read the whole instruction will help you understand how is the whole coming together. I prefer read the whole thing before I start put anything together. In construction world there is a saying: measure twice, cute once. You are lucky enough because everything is already cute for you here. So read twice and assembling once is the golden rule here. :P

4. Brainless work
If something doesn’t seem to fit into the whole furniture easy enough, something is usually not right. Don’t force anything. I’ve done this many times to realize that the brainless way of work is always the easiest way. Everything is cut to fit perfectly to each other so there is no reason to push harder and see if something would fit.

5. Don’t use glue
A lot of people like to use glue because they think that is the only way to secure each piece and ensure the furniture will stay forever. My take is no no on that. :no: Glue down each piece will make your fit harder and make the process longer. The worse part is, it is almost impossible to break it down later if you need to without damage the furniture. Besides, you never know if you gonna use the furniture for another use later. So better keep it “loose".

There you have it, my 5 little secrets to make your assemble life easier. :)) We hope you enjoyed it.

Bonus tip:
Always invite friends and families to join a assemble party if you have multiple pieces to build. Not only make the building process faster, it is also a quality time you could share with them and make them proud that they’ve done something for/with you that would last for a while!

Thursday, July 3, 2008

EZ Assembly Entire House With IKEA For Under $4000!!!

EZ Furniture Assembly & Interior Innovations, LLC started of as one man, a few tools and a passion to make it a business. He quickly saw the need for his services, and decided to take it one step further and get licensed, insured, and certified by most of the major manufactures. He also did his own schooling in interior design and decoration which has allowed him to meet and make friends with the city's top interior designers. However, for over two years most of his work was Ikea assembly so he knew it inside and out. He did his first kitchen about six months after opening. " I was so amazed at how easy they made the installation. The best part is that many of the condos he works at in Brooklyn have walls that were recently built and are not structurally sound with studs sometimes being 36"-60" apart. However, Ikea's support brace allows me to find a stud and drill into it and if needed make a sister between the two to support the weight. " Anyway, Christopher took us to a house of a past customer's friend who was coming from the U.K. in 2 months and wanted a furnished apartment upon arrival. Money was no object, but me and my past customer decided to do the entire house in Ikea. We did everything from the kitchen cabinets to the wardrobes for under $4000.00. Oh yeah... that also included a plasma T.V. and an Apple Gmac. When he arrived he said I know you went over budget but it looks so great just tell me what I owe. He sent twenty thousand!!! He couldn't believe we only spent under $4000.00 for an entire house. Ikea can make dreams come true!!

Monday, June 16, 2008

Can You Believe People Are Camping Out For IKEA Opening in NYC????

So the new IKEA store Brooklyn officially opens two days from now, on Wednesday June 18, but as of 11 AM today, Monday June 16, there were already 18 people waiting in line with sleeping bags. Yes, they are planning on camping out. (Does IKEA make sleeping bags, by the way?!)

Sure, IKEA is a popular store. But it’s safe to say that one reason for the enthusiasm is the fact that the first 35 people in line will get a free couch (too bad they can’t sleep on them before the store opens). The next 100 get a free armchair. And the first 100 kids (separate from the adults waiting for the furniture) get a toy.

Anyone having flashbacks to the iPhone mania last year outside the Apple stores?

IKEA's line is clearly driven by the company's incentives to get shoppers to exercise the same sort of cult-y excitement that once was seen only when tickets for rock concerts first went on sale. Now that sort of excitement is seen for brands, not bands. Last year, everyone was wondering how to mimic Apple and its lines outside its stores. Before that, it was how to mimic the fan queues for the new Xboxes in late 2005. Maybe IKEA has figured out how to have the sort of cult-y brand that usually is only found in the tech sector.

But what is particularly interesting is how the IKEA lines differ from last year's iPhone lines. Last year, people could ostensibly afford a $500 phone. This year, with the economy gloomy, they're camping out for free furniture at a store known for its inexpensive goods.

But what both IKEA and Apple share is, of course, their reputations for simple, appealing design. In the case of IKEA, is that what's driving the brand loyalty? Or is it simply the low prices? Would love to hear your opinions.

Thursday, June 5, 2008

ATTN NYC: IKEA SALE ENDS SOON!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Hurry in for the IKEA Summer Sale. From now until June 9th, save 20%-60% off select items throughout the store. Monday June 9th is the last day, so don’t wait to take advantage of us!

Go to www.IKEA-USA.com
All good things must come to an end, but there's still time to fill up on payloads of select home furnishings at 20-60% off our already-low prices. You'll find everything from summer furniture to storage (both big and small) to sofas, mattresses, bathroom accessories, lighting—and yes, you can even get the kitchen sink! Check out the website now and start your shopping list! Remember, the Summer Sale ends Monday, June 9th!

Find your nearest store

When you come to IKEA during the Summer Sale, you can fill up on more than just great design! We serve hot, tasty and nourishing meals all day long, starting with a full breakfast for just 99¢!

See what's being served at your IKEA store

Only 3.5% Sales Tax
With IKEA Elizabeth's 3.5% sales tax, now furnishings are more affordable than ever. Plus, every Saturday and Sunday take advantage of our complimentary NYC shuttle from Port Authority to IKEA Elizabeth. (3.5% sales tax and complimentary NYC shuttle only at IKEA Elizabeth.) For details, call 1-800-BUS-IKEA.

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IKEA Summer Sale: May 22, 2008 through June 9, 2008. Offer valid only at IKEA Elizabeth, Paramus, Hicksville, New Haven and Stoughton. Offer valid on in-stock merchandise only and while supplies last. Not valid on prior purchases. Selection might vary by store. Not all offers valid at IKEA Direct. Some products require assembly.





Visit us at www.ezfurnitureassembly.com for all your assembly needs

Saturday, March 1, 2008

IKEA Vs. Target Furniture

Lots of lower end furniture, like from Target & Ikea are made from particle board covered with a thin sheet of veneer wood or cheap soft woods like pine. The particle board can, over time, buckle, warp or sag.

The joints with soft woods are weak & that's when you tend to get wobbly furniture after lots of usage. Also the joints themselves are constructed cheaply, just two pieces butted together at a 90 degree angle & screwed together. Sometimes, without even metal anchors. No dovetail joints or tongue & groove joints as in higher end, heirloom furniture made of hardwoods.

However, we have been in the professional assembly bussiness for numerous years and even though there are much better RTA (Ready To Assemble) furniture available on the market, IKEA is a shining star compared to the products Target sells. There is only word that can describe it.....Junk!

Our New York City office has a total of between 10 and 12 certified technicians on call to serve the 5 bouroughs and Long Island. When they complete a job they make notes as to how the product was constructed,Assembly Time missing parts, damaged, holes line up, structurally sound upon completion etc. This helps us determine what the actual time it takes for an experienced technician to assemble a particular piece. It's more or less like a labor manual that all body shops use to determine the costs to do a particular job.

However, in the Furniture Assembly industry, I'm speaking for professional companies that are licensed,insured,certified, and have technicians who have years of construction,remodeling, or furniture assembly experience. Not some ad on Craigslist where siome guy name John says " Will aseemble anyting from ikea or wherever. Cheap! Call my cell phone" No, I am talking about companies that pay rent,taxes,insurance, etc. Anyway, being the founder & president of EZ Furniture Assembly & Interior Innovations, LLC I am forced to wear many hats. One being the marketing and research of the products we assemble.

I Have never been a big fan of all of IKEA's furniture but have found some diamonds in the rough and found their kitchen cabinetry to be equal in standards compared to other stock kitchen manufactuers but available for purchase at a fair price. Target on the other hand is junk! This morning I have been going over the reports from our technicians in the last two months and found that out of the 18 Target assembly jobs we took on we lost money on every one and 7 seperate technicians rated the quality a zero on a scale from one to ten! We lose money because professional companies normally charge 1/3 of the retail price of the piece. If the entertainment center that sells at Ikea for $500.00 is only $200.00 at Target we can only charge the 1/3 which equals out to about $66.00 plus tax. Now for that $66.00 it takes our technician 4 hours to assemble it because he had to make alterations, add support braces etc. That is what $16.25 per hour plus the company pays the technician damn near that much per hour and some even more, we lose! We post our rate chart on our website so it's hard to say to someone that bought a $100.00 dresser from Target that we would normally have to charge you our lowest service charge of $60.00, but since it is NO NAME from Target we're going to have to charge you a hundred and can';t guarantee that the piece will be assembled as it appeared online because their products are very poorly made. The first thing a potential customer is going to think is we are trying to take them for more money, we're a scam, or whatever else you can bet it wouldn't be good.Notes ranged from missing parts, prefab holes off by as much as on inch which required a technician to either get the customers written approval to corect theior errors or have the customer return the items back to Target. Ikea uses Tremand to inspect and grade each of their products prior to placing them on the floor for sale and work out any issues found in their inspection. I am thouroughly convinced that Target had no such 3rd party to assemble, inspect, and evaluate their furniture which has lead to their sales of JUNK fuirniture. Many people who call usthought they could do the assembly themselves and quicly foundout they couldn't. However, if you have purchased furniture from Target their is not a company in operation that can assemble their furniture products without making severe alterations. My advice to EVERYONE is stay away from Target furniture!!!!

I am very seriously contemplating posting a note on our website stating that we no longer assemble Target furniture. Am I alone on this one or do other people find Target furniture to be junk? Please call us or post your comments we would love to hear from you.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Artist in Residence

When Guy Ben-Ner goes to Ikea, he’s not there for the meatballs.




Ikea’s homepage recently proposed: “Feel free to take advantage of us.” At Postmasters Gallery, the wily Guy Ben-Ner has happily obliged. Last year, without permission, this Israel-born artist who lives in New York and Berlin—he ably represented Israel in the 2005 Venice Biennale—installed himself, his wife, and their two cutie-pie kids in Ikea model rooms all over the world. Setting a camcorder on “auto,” Ben-Ner filmed his family in a semi-scripted soap opera. Most scenes last until Ikea staff throws everyone out. The result is the bitingly crackpot, politically poignant eighteen-minute Stealing Beauty.

Ben-Ner’s film, while a bit inert and drawn-out, takes cues from Buster Keaton, Rube Goldberg, John Cage, vaudeville, Frederic Engels, and Edward Said. Shots are well-planned but simple, chance dictates results, sight gags reign, identity politics are ever present. In the opening scene, we watch the straight-faced beanpole Ben-Ner duck behind a shower curtain and begin to bathe. Ben-Ner’s wife peers into the shower and catches him masturbating. He throws on a robe and dashes out, protesting that he was only washing. His son and daughter enter as Ben-Ner pours a drink (we hear liquid, but nothing comes out of the pitcher). Ben-Ner’s wife tells him that his children have been misbehaving. He lectures the kids, spouting pseudo-Marxist bromides like “the family stops the property from leaking out,” holding forth on the value of objects, commodities, and the means of production. The son asks, “Is Mom private property?” and the kids write a manifesto of statements like “Children of the world, unite.” If Air America ran after-school specials, they’d sound like this.

Throughout, visual glitches multiply. Ben-Ner interrupts scenes to give stage directions. Strangers walk through, some staring as if at the zoo. The tags on the furniture switch languages. Announcements in German, Hebrew, and English intrude. The family keeps looking off-camera, skittish as deer. The narrative flows uninterrupted from room to room, continuity be damned. In one scene, Ben-Ner lies in five different beds.

As ordinary as the surroundings are, the Ben-Ners aren’t your typical TV family. They have accents and dark skin, and stand out like glockenspiels in these squeaky-clean Euro environments. The Ben-Ners behave as if they were displaced nomads, acting out a primal need and a territorial aggression, claiming these Ikeas as a kind of Promised Land.

Much political art is overdidactic, with a false axis of right and wrong. Ben-Ner’s art is richer and more confusing. Though the artist is Israeli, Said’s words about the Palestinian plight best get at the undercurrent in this work: the “unhealable rift” and “terminal loss” of exile. Ben-Ner seems to posit that we are all others in someone’s eyes. Like many with overdetermined histories, Ben-Ner seems to wish his family would blend in, that its backstory would just go away.

It won’t, of course, and as he touches on these issues and melds the personal and political, while trying to make art and be a loving father, Ben-Ner creates androgynous and empathetic psychic sparks. He recombines ideas of masculinity in ways that few male artists have. In the past, he has shown himself imprisoned under a crib by his son and cast himself as a loving father of an ostrich family in Riverside Park. Whatever he does, you feel Ben-Ner’s desire to simultaneously ruffle feathers, escape, and make do.

In the rear gallery, Ben-Ner has installed two stationary bikes. If you climb on and pedal, a short video titled I’d give it to you if I could but I borrowed it is projected on a monitor. Onscreen, Ben-Ner and his kids rummage through a museum and assemble a bicycle from several readymade sculptures. After putting Duchamp’s bicycle wheel and the bike seat and handlebars of Picasso’s bull’s-head sculpture back to their original uses, the brood pauses to take LSD—the Ben-Ner family values are nothing if not strange—and then goes out for a ride. It’s as if you’re in a penny arcade watching some ancient film machine, only you’re part of the entertainment, and you mimic the action.

All art comes from other art, and all immigrants come from other places. What makes Ben-Ner’s art stand out is that he puts these ideas together so well, continually cannibalizing the culture and objects he encounters, trying to make these things work for his art and his family. In this way, he echoes the immigrant’s story and the artist’s quest.


Saturday, February 2, 2008

Imbuing a bachelor pad with a touch of class

What makes a great bachelor pad? Rocking state-of-the-art audio system, maybe? Gleaming Le Corbusier chrome and leather seating? Or maybe a flashing neon Heineken sign?

Kenzi Parton and Rafael Corrales found a romantic city view but none of the above when they came back from Argentina at Christmastime 2006 and their friend Ron Jankov, president and CEO of NetLogic Microsystems, offered them the use of his South of Market pied-a-terre while they were house hunting.

"The place was kind of abandoned - there were no matching drinking glasses, no pots, bulbs were burned out," Corrales said. "He'd bring guests over to drink Cristal after a party, and they were going to be drinking out of glasses pilfered from various clubs and restaurants rather than matching crystal."

"A beautiful apartment, a beautiful view," Parton said. "But it felt very empty."

Not at all, she added, the kind of place with which Jankov, 48, would make a favorable impression on a date.

"No way!" she said. "That would have been the end of it. ... You wouldn't believe he was the CEO of a company - I'd probably have thought he was making up a story."

These days, Parton and Corrales can drink out of handcrafted Baccarat crystal and sleep on luxurious Frette linens when they visit Jankov at what is finally more to him than a city crash pad. Turns out, he didn't really need beer signage, stereo equipment or sleek furniture - just some things he already owned, along with fresh paint, a few additions and a woman's touch.

The feminine helping hands belong to Lawanna Cathleen Endonino, the designer Parton and Corrales brought to the table to transform Jankov's occasional place to sleep into a home where he comfortably enjoys the city life and welcomes friends.

"I walked in and knew he needed me," Endonino said. "He said, 'Please make me a place my friends won't make fun of.' "

"It was half about presenting myself in a certain way and half about being able to enjoy it myself," Jankov said. "I love art and have an uncle who traveled around the world collecting it, and I've spent a lot of time in Japan and always loved the architecture and design culture there."

Jankov also has a home in Woodside he describes as "a country estate look, made of redwood on a big estate of 6 acres, very rural, very quiet and peaceful, and way too boring for weekends." He purchased an 1,800-square-foot unit on the 57th floor of the yet-to-be-completed One Rincon, so the Avalon Towers apartment represented "a practice run," he said.

Endonino listened carefully and then got to work. First, she stretched the limitations of decorating a rental unit, painting the entry a dark mix of chocolate and charcoal gray that provided a dramatic canvas for the paintings that greet visitors. She used Devine Paint's Almond, which looks blue on the walls, in the main living area, and covered the guest room walls in Donghia's gray-taupe hemp wallpaper. (The walls will have to be restored to rental vanilla when Jankov moves out, of course.)

She also changed the lighting cans and replaced the bulbs with incandescents, an expenditure of less than $1,000 that she says "was well worth it - it's a great way to really change things." She also would have liked to do some custom natural-fiber window coverings, but that seemed a waste on a short-term rental, so they left the various blinds alone.

She picked out some sisal rugs from Crate & Barrel to define the living spaces over the wall-to-wall carpeting, and then shopped for furniture all over the map, with Jankov's own couch and Roche-Bobois dining table as cornerstones.

The big splurges: a Bang & Olufsen plasma TV, a Noguchi IN50 coffee table, custom beds and nightstands from Rahn Woodworking, the aforementioned Frette and Baccarat accessories, Robert Stivers photos and paintings from Baxter & Cook and ArtHaus, and Jankov's own collection.

In his years as vice president and general manager of Cyrix Corp.'s Asia operations, he spent a lot of time in Japan and became an admirer of Asian design, so he had a chest from Korea for one corner. He also had an adventurous, "well-traveled" uncle, Edison Brubaker, who collected art.

"These mean something to me," Jankov said, pointing to paintings hanging over the bar. "He got these when he went on a hunting trip for anacondas in the Amazon."

Endonino found that bar on a shopping trip to Crate & Barrel. She found other furnishings on eBay, at Brownstone, Candace Barnes, Unique Images, Design Within Reach, Restoration Hardware and even Ikea; her source list on this project is too long for publication.

The resulting blend of the luxurious and the inexpensive, the antique and the personal, portrays Jankov as a successful bachelor who cares about comfort and the finer things in life, yet doesn't feel compelled to show off.

"It doesn't go over the top," Parton said. "Bachelor pads can be too sterile or too modern and not show any personality. This is a less superficial way to go."

Endonino defines the mix as Asian Modern; Jankov describes it as uniquely personal.

"I did not describe this at all," he said. "Yet it turned out to be exactly what I wanted."

He's clearly thrilled, and no longer embarrassed to have friends over. The day of The Chronicle's first visit, 10 empty wine bottles on the kitchen counter memorialized Jankov's New Year's Eve gathering; the day of the second visit, he held one of the blind wine tastings that have become popular within his circle.

"Women notice it more than the men, and they just love it," Jankov said happily. "Nobody thinks this is done in a way that's inappropriate. There's no Laura Ashley here."

No beer sign either. Which, guys, is probably a fine omission when the aim is to create a haven that appeals to the opposite sex.

"I think a woman could live here too," Endonino said. "It's very comfortable."

Bachelor vs. bachelorette?

Lawanna Cathleen Endonino was working on a "bachelorette pad" about the same time she completed Ron Jankov's apartment. Whereas Jankov "wanted comfort and a beautiful crash pad to entertain in and enjoy himself," the bachelorette was creating a full-time home where "she could entertain as well as give herself the feeling of nesting or settling down."

The bachelorette wanted to mix maturity, femininity and masculinity, Endonino said, and thus went for a "sexy boudoir" Parisian look that suited her taste but that she hoped men would also like.

So it would seem that two elements most essential in a singles pad are comfort and personality. "Even if it's just your crash pad, it should reflect who you are," said former bachelor Rafael Corrales. "There should be a symmetry between the time you spend outside your home when you're dating, and what your home is like."

Monday, January 21, 2008

IKEA As an Elective? IKEA makes it way into the University of Oregon

Well, I think it's safe to say that me and my team have Love/Hate relationship with IKEA. One day we love them and the next we hate them. However, IKEA for the most part is very modern, affordable, and the designers are way ahead of other companies in both design and functionality. My biggest problem with them is that they use Tremand do install their kitchen cabinets, as well study their products for overall workmanship, quality, how it will function, and then they provide their opinion and rating along with suggestions of course. I was going to tell you why I have a problem with this, but it is a story in itself which I will post next. I am sure many of you will read the post and say " hey, that was my problem" or something similar. After reading the next post you will understand that IKEA is not totally to blame since they hire another company to ensure everything is A plus. Stay tuned and you might learn something.

The following article is a great article in which I took parts from Oregon Life newspaper to write the article. If you are interseted in being a writer for the blog or have a story you want to share just email me at www.ezfurnitureassembly.com and I am sure we would be happy to add you to our list of contributors or post your story. As I leave to do my daily business I want to wish all you lucky souls with the day off a Happy Holiday, in which I hope you enjoy and remember to do or say a nice thing for someone today, because no matter what many people say or believe Martin Luther King only wanted us to be as one and continue to do the next right thing for anyone no matter race, color, religion, or creed. With that said, go sweep your neighbors stoop ya bum!

At first blush, it sounds like the kind of product placement that earns the marketing team a week in the Caribbean.

IKEA, that global purveyor of all things furniture, is stepping into the classroom at the University of Oregon. Tables, chairs and beds made by the Swedish sensation will be held up as models for students in the architecture department, who will spend the next two months analyzing the stuff as a starting point for their own creations.

You can’t buy that kind of advertising.

But assistant professor Esther Hagenlocher said her new course is anything but a 10-week IKEA commercial.

“It’s a little difficult to explain, because I’ve never done it before myself,” Hagenlocher said. “The goal of the whole thing is that we talk about design in various ways.”

Students will study IKEA designs, attempt to replicate them and then spin off into making their own original pieces. Hagenlocher (sounding a bit commercial-ish) said IKEA was the best brand to study because “they bring contemporary design to everybody and they’re producing a lot of good things for reasonable prices.”

Mind you, this is not the first time that the lines between commerce and education have been blurred (see: the UO and a certain shoe company). Nor is anyone suggesting there’s anything untoward about a major university using a major retailer in the fulfillment of a student’s major.

Hagenlocher was clear. “It’s not bringing IKEA and the world of commerce into the classroom,” she said. “It’s more looking at IKEA as the company who is bringing design to everybody, and to look critically at their product.”

Whoops — did someone say “critically”?

There’s an old saying, “everybody loves a winner,” and it’s entirely undone by the critics among us. You hear them sound off — online and on street corners — about the ills of all the commercial success stories of our time (just Google “I hate Starbucks” or “I hate McDonald’s” or “I hate Google” or ...)

IKEA has 270 stores in 36 countries and a laundry list of accolades (“100 Best Companies to Work For,” “100 Best Companies for Working Mothers” ...)

But it also has its critics. The Web is busy with naysayers nay-saying the names of IKEA items (“Lycksele” and “Bjursta,” for example) or the craftsmanship, or the stores’ meandering floor layouts (“There aren’t enough signs, arrows, guide dogs in the world to make IKEA easy to navigate,” one blogger wrote).

Hard to say how hard UO students will be on IKEA. Architecture student Jeff Hoge, 22, said IKEA is well respected in his crowd because it’s cheap — er, “inexpensive,” he corrected himself — and of good quality.

The IKEA name “has brought more publicity (to the program) than ever before,” Hoge said, and he’s excited about a change of pace from his main coursework in the design of mixed-use buildings.

Interior design “is such a different scale from designing a building,” Hoge said. “It’s so much more intimate and personal — it’s a complete breath of fresh air.”

Nor does the furniture giant appear worried about UO students picking apart the product. IKEA Portland store manager Ken Bodeen said he was happy to accommodate the university’s idea (and theycame to IKEA, not the other way around, he noted straightaway).

Bodeen made the trip to Eugene last week to lecture on the company philosophy — “It’s about creating a better everyday life for the many,” he said — then hosted a tour of the Portland store for the design students.

Bodeen said he hopes UO students will come away from the course with an appreciation for what it takes to design sensible, functional home furnishings.

“We’re very pleased to start this relationship with the University of Oregon,” Bodeen said. “It’s a win-win for both the university and IKEA.”

Indeed.

Michael Manucci

Contributing Editor

www.ezfurnitureassembly.com

Sunday, January 20, 2008

All New Furniture is Mass Produced

1/20/2008

All New Furniture is Mass Produced

By: EZ Furniture Assembly and Interior Innovations, LLC
These days almost all furniture is mass produced. Even furniture pieces at the higher end of the market generally come off a production line. This mass-production has obvious benefits in terms of both cost and flexibility of course, but there’s something a little impersonal about knowing that thousands of other people have the same bed, three-piece suite or dining furniture as you. The alternative is to buy Handcrafted Furniture from a specialist furniture manufacturer. Although significantly more expensive than a mass-produced alternative, and generally more old-fashioned in appearance hand crafted furniture does offer unrivaled quality and exclusivity.

Once upon a time, all furniture was handmade. You have seen this furniture of old in the homes of your grandparents or in antique stores. Each piece was lovingly crafted according to the desires of the craftsman and client, resulting in furniture that was wholly unique. Designs were intricate and often used more than one type of wood.

When you find a handmade antique table, for example, you know that there is no other table in the world quite like it. Old-fashioned standards for making furniture were rigorous, and the furniture of our ancestors was built to last. That is why so much of it continues to be handed down through the generations.
Assembly line furniture however often lacks character and is certainly inferior in terms of build- quality and materials. Because it is created by machines and set patterns that are repeated over and over, it has no distinctive qualities, nothing that makes it stand out. In addition, Assembly line workers and machines function on tight schedules which means they can’t afford to take the time to make sure every screw is tight and every joint fitted perfectly. The speed at which such furniture must be made also means that cheap and often inferior materials are used in its construction, resulting in pieces that tend to fall apart in even a few short years. As with everything though there are exceptions. The original Egg Chair of the 1950s and other mass-produced retro items from the 1950s, 60s and 70s have stood the test of time, and are much sought after these days as the fashion of these past decades becomes current once again.
Further quality issues have also arisen as a result of the recent self-assembly furniture revolution. The idea behind self-assembly furniture is that costs are significantly reduced and transportation of large items is easy, and as a consequence this type of furniture has revolutionized the furniture industry. However, assembling furniture at home with no expert supervision, following a series of often complicated black and white instructions does not guarantee correct construction. Even our Expert Technicians can spend hours assembling a new design from the major RTA (Ready To Assemble) retailers. However, we consider that a school day and after that we can normally cut the time down to at least half. The sad truth for consumers is in a recent study it was proven that it takes the average person six to eight times longer to assemble a piece of furniture than a professional and 80% of the furniture assembled was assembly incorrectly.

The ultimate luxury in furniture is handcrafted bespoke designs. Specialist furniture manufacturers can be commissioned to produce bespoke designs that fit exactly with the customer’s décor. Bespoke furniture can be very costly but can be viewed as an investment as well as a perfect interior design solution. In most cases, if treated correctly, this type of furniture will increase in value over time

I hate to shoot myself in the foot but I know my article won't change peoples minds or have a dramatic effect on our business, but the best furniture which was handmade from the 20's-40's still can be found and bought for a reasonable price at the right auctions. New York City is absolutely out of the question because you will pay more than what the piece(s) are actually worth. For a bargain on high quality antique furniture I strongly suggest you look into auctions in NE Pennsylvania in which are only a 2 hour ride from the city and can yield great buys for your buck. However, if you rather the modern chic furniture but aren't up for the assembly part you can contact us and we will be happy to assemble whatever you decide to purchase. We will also be happy to give our expert opinion on certain companies and certain products or models from our experience working with them. All you have to do is post your question here and one of our expert technicians or experts from various outlets will answer your question.

Once again, thank you for reading today's post and we wish everyone a happy holiday.

Christopher Purnell
Founder and President
EZ Furniture Assembly and Interior Innovations,LLC
www.ezfurnitureassembly.com

Friday, January 18, 2008

Straight From The Design Pros

Straight From The Design Pros

Thursday, January 17, 2008; Page H04

Have great-looking washable throws on hand to protect couches or chairs from spills, stains and paw prints. (Sara Costello of Domino magazine has one in a striking leopard pattern. "It's a sofa saver," she says.)

This Story

Leather upholstery is pricey but nearly indestructible; scratches, wear and even stains just add to its patina.

Have carpets and area rugs cleaned often, even three or four times a year.

Dirt, stains and pet hair show up more on very dark and very light fabrics. Medium tones and patterns provide more camouflage.

Use sisal or sea grass for wall-to-wall carpets or area rugs for their stylish durability. An Oriental rug or faux animal hide can add color on top.

Slipcovers today are less slouchy, more fitted, with a tailored skirt pleat and no ruffles. But they're as washable as ever.

When upholstering furniture, buy an extra yard or two so if mishaps occur, you can replace one cush ion instead of the entire couch.

Adding decorative trim to inexpensive upholstered pieces gives them a high-price custom look.

Windows can be well dressed without costing a fortune. Check Home Depot for inexpensive woven shades and Ikea and Target for simple drapery panels. The layering adds interest.

Choose (relatively) unbreakable accessories, such as baskets or bowls filled with moss balls, or books. If you like the fragile look, turn to eBay and flea market finds that aren't too expensive.

Shelves, bookcases and other ready-made case goods can get a custom look with paint, reinforced shelving and the addition of crown molding at a fraction of the cost of custom-built furniture.

A good time to invest in art is when children are really young. They can't reach it.

When furnishing a home where children live, less is more. They need room to move and play; add furniture as they grow.

Above all, declutter: Almost any room looks better with some careful editing.

Terri Sapienza

SOURCES: Sara Costello, creative director, Domino magazine; Sandra Meyer, Ella Scott Design, Bethesda; Shanon Munn, Ambi Design Studio, Springfield; Raji Radhakrishnan, Raji RM & Associates, Brambleton; Megan Samuels, Megan Samuels Interior Design, Manhattan Beach, Calif.; Claire Schwab, Claire Schwab Interior Design, Alexandria.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Now this is a Cool Ikea Hack idea

Hello Fans! No please.... no applause needed:) I hope everyone is pleased with my constant blog updates. It was one of my new year's resolutions, and since this is our dead season I have the time to share a few words of wisdom and cool things I have done or seen. Speaking of cool things I just noticed this cool hack on Ikea Hacker which is a great site that really shows you how far ones imagination can go.


Is this Turtle pad cool or what??

In my next post I want to share with you a story, or better my dissatisfaction with CB2 which is a division of Crate & Barrel. This was a simple unit that was just made of scrap pieces. That's enough because I really want to share this story. If you have a furniture assembly horror story please share it with us.

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

RTA Furniture

RTA furniture

Ready-To-Assemble (RTA) furniture was created to solve a fundamental problem in shipping furniture: the relatively high cost of shipping the products compared to the low cost of actually producing them. All the pieces of the product are shipped in a very compact box with detailed instructions on how to assemble the unit. The intent is for the product to be assembled at home by the buyer. Costs are saved by the assembly not being performed in the factory and by greatly reduced volumes for shipping and storage by the distributor and retailer. Self-assembly furniture is very common in Britain, Europe, and Canada.

According to IKEA, flat-pack furniture was invented by Swedish draughtsperson Gillis Lundgren who, in order to fit a table in the boot of his car broke off the legs then reassembled it at home. He took his idea to his employers IKEA, who later built their business around it.

Do It Yourself (DIY) oriented people can find it enjoyable to assemble RTA units. The ease of assembly required also varies. IKEA furniture for example, is marketed on its completeness including Allen keys in the package if they are needed. However, the assembly of some brands require the customer to have access to a much larger selection of hand or even power tools. Ironically, a common complaint is that some RTA packages do not include necessary screws, fixings or even parts required to complete assembly.

The most common types of RTA furniture are living room and office furniture, including bookcases, tables, beds and lounge-ware. Outdoor furniture e.g. swingsets and patio settings is another common example of RTA furniture.

Self-assembly kitchens are available from some retailers. These are made to uniform sizes. They benefit from a wide number of options and the ability to easily update them through the addition of for example, new cupboard doors.

Consider a CD/DVD storage rack. In the design of this furniture the cost of transporting and storing this product is kept in mind by retailing it as a flat pack. A flatter product can be easily stored and the cost of transport is lower overall as more items can be moved in the same space occupied by the assembled product. The cost of labour can also be reduced as there is no need for workers to assemble the product before it is sold. Other cost-cutting techniques can be employed by using particle board laminated with vinyl instead of using solid timber for example.

EZ Furniture Assembly is NYC's experts in RTA furniture for your home or office. We also offer kitchen cabinet assembly and installation, and furniture repair. Click here to visit us now.

Monday, February 19, 2007

People Trust IKEA More Than GOD!!!!!!!

People Trust IKEA More Than GOD!!!!!!!

Swedes Trust IKEA More than the Church

What do Volvo, Ericsson, Saab and IKEA have in common? The people of Sweden have more faith in them than in the church.

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An IKEA store in Sweden: People trust the furniture maker more than the church.
REUTERS

An IKEA store in Sweden: People trust the furniture maker more than the church.

Perhaps the news shouldn't come as much of a surprise, coming as it does from a country best known for its meatballs and the bright blue and yellow warehouses selling cheap and cheerful furniture around the globe. Still, preacher men the world over must be reeling. A new poll taken of Swedes indicates that more people trust IKEA than the church in the largely Protestant country.

According to the poll, taken by the business weekly Dagens Industri, 80 percent of Swedes said they had "much or very much trust" in the world's largest furniture store chain, which was founded by Ingvar Kamprad. But only 46 percent of the 800 people surveyed said they trusted the Swedish church, which counts 80 percent of the 9 million residents living in Sweden as members.

IKEA isn't the only company Swedes trust more than the church -- the list also includes Volvo (69 percent), Ericsson (59), Saab (57) and pharmaceutical giant Astra Zeneca (47) as well as four other companies that beat out the church on the trust factor. Indeed, the church landed in slot 14, behind Sweden's public television station, its universities, small business, the central bank and the daily paper Dagens Nyheter.

There was, however, some positive news for the church: It got better marks than the conservative party of Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt (30 percent). And it fared better than foreign companies like Coca-Cola, which only 22 percent of Swedes said they trusted.

Welcome

Hello. My name is Christopher, and I'm the owner and project manager of EZ Furniture Assembly of New York City. We are a professional furniture, fitness equipment, kitchen cabinet assembly and installation service. We also specialize in providing our customers with handyman and other helpful services. I spent a majority of my life working in sales and marketing. When I finally decided to leave this line of work I was the Regional Manager for a major marketing company. I was always told that whatever I decided to do, if I liked doing it it wouldn't be work. Well, when I worked in marketing the income was fantastic and I was living a "GQ" style life. As the years passed I became mentally, spiritually, and emotionally exhausted of this line of work and the entire lifestyle as a whole. I guess there just wasn't any real satisfaction in it for me, except the great income which actually became less important as I got older. I met the most wonderful person in all my life, and decided to move to New York City so we could be closer. Once here, I needed income but knew with every fiber in my body that I didn't want to go back into sales or marketing. I have always been very handy and come from a family of blue collar workers. When I was younger I always worked the summers as a masons tender, or as a carpenters helper. Then as I grew older many of my friends got into the real estate market and it seemed like every weekend I was helping fix or build something. And if you're like me you know and understand the great feeling of happiness and accomplishment you get when you see what your hard work has created or resulted in. So, I started doing side jobs here and there in the city to make ends meet until I found something permanent. After months of doing this I really began to take notice of all the furniture assembly work I was doing, and that there was such a great demand for this kind of service. I decided at that point that I was going to go all in and concentrate on building a business, a future. It's been about a year and it is still like going to school everyday, but I wouldn't trade it for the world. I have met so many wonderful people and can't begin to explain the feeling I get when I see the customers eyes light up when they the work we've done.

I decided to put this blog together where like minded people would have a place to meet, find and share information, tips, ideas, as well as their experiences. The blog is open to everyone, but I hope it will be the New Yorker's who really get involved. There are so many blogs that deal with an array of home improvement tips already. I want this to be the place where people in the city can share a sale at the Home Depot on 23rd, or how to make a SOHO loft look twice the size with a simple paint job. I hope that everyone from professional handymen, contractors, interior designers, and the like to the do it yourselfer and weekend warrior will find this blog not only informative but interesting and entertaining. I believe this will be just like any other venture I've been a part of, and we will only get out what we put in. If you have a question, ask it. If you know the answer, give it. If you have a story or experience, tell it. If you've been inspired by a story, share it.

I really have no idea as to what direction this blog will go in, but I do know that I look forward to hearing every ones suggestions, comments, and constructive criticism. I will be doing my best to answer any and all questions you may have regarding furniture assembly, kitchen cabinet installation, as well as any other questions you may have regarding your house or apartment. However, I hope that in time we will be able to put together a panel of experts that will be able to provide answers and information that are directly related to the services they provide. But keep in mind that this is an open blog and this blog is built on the concept of like minded individuals helping one another. So, if you know the answer or have a suggestion please share it.

The vast majority of the work we do is on IKEA products, so the first of hopefully many posts will be about IKEA and their products. Plus I've had a lot of this information on our company website and I didn't see any reason why I shouldn't share these articles.

I would like to thank everyone in advance, and hope to hear from you soon.

About Me

My photo
I am a person who has had a rollercoaster of a life, with more downs than ups. I spent several years in marketing in which I started entry level and left Regional Marketing Director. I was blessed with a little princess and deiced my life needed an over haul so I started EZ Furniture Assembly & Interior Innovations, LLC with no more than a few screwdrivers, a shoebox of past due bills and a passion to succeed at something I found I really enjoy. Today I run NYC's top professional furniture assembly & kitchen installation companies, and am considered an expert in my industry.