It's the second weekend in September already and I'm going to try something new. It's still summer where I live and in keeping with the summery weather and in a vain attempt to reclaim something resembling my life, I'm going to start running archive posts on weekends for the next couple of week. I just want to see how it goes.
I've been blogging daily for more than two years now and I have the feeling that somehow the sun won't come up if I don't have a blog post written every day. I know that's BS and I need to prove it to myself. So bear with me.
I have some pretty deep archives and a lot of those old posts never see the light of day anymore. The following post ran under the headline "Sofas, Sofas Everywhere and not a Place to Sit" on 20 February 2008. Wa-a-a-a-y back then I didn't have an audience and I didn't know what I was doing so it's just as well that a lot of that old stuff never gets read these days. But some of it wasn't so bad. My buyers' guide to sofas is a post that still has something to say.
I have been on a quest for the right sofa for my living room for the last couple of years, and I'm proving myself to be my own worst client. I can't pick furnishings for myself to save my life. In the course of all of that back and forth I've learned a lot about sofas and even though it hasn't helped me decide between a Mitchell Gold and a Barbara Barry it helps me find better stuff for my clients. So if it's sofa time for you, pay close heed to some tips about what makes a good sofa good in the first place and why good sofas are so bloody expensive.
A sofa starts with a frame. In better furniture, that frame is made from kiln-dried hardwood. These hardwoods are kiln-dried to remove any residual moisture and to prevent later warping or cracking. In less-expensive furniture, that hardwood frame is replaced with furniture-grade plywood. A hardwood or furniture-grade plywood frame is the first thing to look at if this is a piece of furniture that will get a lot of use and that you expect to hold onto for a long time. A good sofa is screwed and glued at its joints and its corners are reinforced with blocks. These are things you cannot see, so ask your salesperson about a sofa's frame construction and you should hear something like what I just wrote. If he stares at you blankly, leave the store immediately and go somewhere else.
If you're looking for something that won't get used a lot, or that you expect to get rid of in a couple of years; a frame made of particle board is for you. The particle board frame won't keep its shape over time and its joints will eventually break. The $7,000 Henredon sofa and the $900 knock off of it at Ikea may look similar on the outside, but it's the insides that count here.
If you spend any time in furniture showrooms, you hear the term "hand tied" bandied about but no one really gets into what it means. What the term refers to is the sofa's suspension system. The suspension is the second element that separates better furniture from cheaper furniture. "Hand Tied" is shorthand for eight-way hand-tied steel-coil system --called this because each steel coil is attached at eight different points to other coils and then the whole system is attached to the frame. This allows for the coils to operate independently, but not too much. The result is called the sofa's "ride," or how it feels when you sit on it. The hand tied method of using coils is regarded by the industry as the best marker of quality and you can be sure that the $7,000 Henredon has hand-tied coils. Down from that is a drop-in coil system where the individual coils are clipped to one another and then clipped to the frame. This system won't last as long and will give a more uneven ride. Finally, our $900 example will likely have what's known as sinuous construction and it will be the shortest-lived of the three methods here. Sinuous, or zig zag, construction uses S-shaped steel wires that run from side to side of the frame. Sinuous suspensions are stiffer and are omnipresent to the point that most people expect a sofa to feel the way it does with one of these suspension systems.
But more than the other two categories, the largest driver of a sofa's price is the fabric it's upholstered in. There is a staggering range of fabric qualities out there. And as is the case with a lot of things, if you don't know what quality is, don't learn or you'll spend fortunes chasing it. An upholstery fabric should be attractive, obviously; but it needs to be resilient and easy to clean as well. The tag on a sofa will tell you how it can be spot cleaned through a series of codes. Guard your sanity and avoid anything labeled "Brush Clean" only.
Always ask how long the lead time is for the delivery if it's a custom piece. Typical turn arounds range anywhere from one month to nine months. Know going in that the minute you customize a piece of furniture is the same minute that it stops being returnable. Think about this for a while and look at the fabric swatch in your own home before you buy anything. Do your homework, pick something and get on with it.
11 September 2010
10 September 2010
Fiorentino's the gift that keeps on giving
Posted by
Paul Anater
First we had lighting for a modernist bordello.
Then we had coordinating, pleather ottomans and various poufs.
So what's missing? Why coffee tables of course. Fiorentino thinks of everything.
Where's Telly Savalas when you need him?
Then we had coordinating, pleather ottomans and various poufs.
So what's missing? Why coffee tables of course. Fiorentino thinks of everything.
Where's Telly Savalas when you need him?
Labels:
foolishness,
interior design
09 September 2010
A Tile of Spain fall preview
Posted by
Paul Anater
The Spanish Tile Manufacturer's Association is a private organization whose goal is to promote Spanish tile manufacturers worldwide Under the Tile of Spain banner. In Spanish, they are the Asociación Española de Fabricantes de Azulejos y Pavimentos Cerámicos, and they go by the acronym ASCER. Ascer represents more than 200 Spanish tile manufacturers, most of whom are located in the province of Castellón. From Castellón, Tile of Spain brings to the world some truly amazing materials.
Cersaie, a world tile showcase, takes place in Bologna in a few weeks. Tile of Spain sent me some preview images of new products that will make their debut at the show.
From Azulejos Plaza, here's Tuscany, a porcelain tile produced using a combination of different reliefs and ink jet printing technology. The resulting look is classified as Rappolano, created from a selection of the finest rappolano stones available. This gives great variation from one piece to another, approximately 80-100 different faces. The series is available in four colors: Bone, Copper, Terra and Gold and is available in 18” x 18", 12” x 24 " with 2” x 2" mosaics.
From Ceramicas Aparici comes Novocemento and Novocemento SLIM to meet minimalist design needs. This rectified porcelain tile is double-fired for ultimate durability and is available in both standard thickness and Aparici’s slim tile option, SLIM4. Novocemento is available in formats 45x90, 22.5x90 and 30x60 and in Marfil, Gris, Brown and Negro.
From Land Porcelanico comes Azulcascais. Azulcascais takes its name and inspiration from a natural stone typically found in Portugal. This full-body, technical porcelain tile, is available in formats 45x90, 22.5x90, 30x60 and in ivory, moss and graphite.
From the Navarti Group comes a new HD (high definition) collection called Riverstone. The Riverstone series uses inkjet digital technology combined with pressing to perfectly reproduce the look of natural river stones.
Finally, from TAU Ceramica comes the Breccia collection. As the name would suggest, Brecchia gets its name from Breccia Aurora stone. The crystalline effect of its highly polished surface reveals veins, unique shapes and chromatic variations. This is a porcelain tile for the most demanding users, yet for whom elegance is a priority. Breccia is available in 44x44 and 60x60 formats for floor tiles, plus 32x90 for wall tiles.
If you'd like more information about these or any of the more than 200 Spanish Tile Manufacturers represented by Tile of Spain, please browse their website.
These materials are even more stunning in person than they appear here. If you're fortunate enough to be at Cersaie laster this month please let me know what you see at the show. I'll be there next year if it's the last thing I do.
Labels:
tile
08 September 2010
Computer furniture redefined
Posted by
Paul Anater
Creede Fitch ran a post on Grass Roots Modern yesterday that made me stop in my tracks.
In a world where something that looks like this passes for a typical home office,
imagine the room you could create around this Mid-Century-inspired PC.
As stunning as it is on the the front end, on the back end it's all business.
This PC was designed and built by the amazing Jeffrey Stephenson. Stephenson is a computer designer and innovator and his work is beyond incredible. Here's some other highlights from his website.
Look through his entire collection. It's great that somebody out there is thinking like this. Apple eat your heart out.
In a world where something that looks like this passes for a typical home office,
![]() |
| via Flickr |
imagine the room you could create around this Mid-Century-inspired PC.
As stunning as it is on the the front end, on the back end it's all business.
This PC was designed and built by the amazing Jeffrey Stephenson. Stephenson is a computer designer and innovator and his work is beyond incredible. Here's some other highlights from his website.
Look through his entire collection. It's great that somebody out there is thinking like this. Apple eat your heart out.
Labels:
design
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