@afewbugs I keep having to explain to my mum (age 75) that furniture is NOT expensive but rent/mortgages are MASSIVE. And that for 1-3 months' rent in most places, you could furnish an entire house with IKEA type stuff.
My mum is stuck in the early 70s, rent was cheap but places were grotty and furniture was £££. Mum and Dad had grocers' boxes and a wardrobe door as a table for months after moving in. Their first bed cost £££ and was an investment 'for life' (25yrs till the divorce).
@NatalyaD @afewbugs
I was told the same!
We finally managed to save up for a down payment, and we were told "make sure to budget about $10k for furnishing it". What?!?!?
We've lived in an apartment for 18 years and have everything we need already. I can get any other piece of furniture I'd want secondhand for less than $100. WTF would I spend $10k on?
We were lucky enough to be able to buy after long-term renting so we have installed A LOT of fixed shelving (house is small, Z axis needed)
My new-house spreadsheet says we spent £850 on storage total including Really Useful Boxes for cycling, electronics and tech stuff.
I guess if we include pre-new-house spend that might be £1000 total on storage in 5+ years.
Including the bed we built, mattresses & 2nd hand that's still way under £2000 in 23 years living together
Yep! I think even second hand furniture in the 70s was expensive in the UK at least. Whereas now I think the 2nd hand costs dropped because there is so much cheap mass produced stuff that is "trendy".
Much of our furniture is acquired from our families. My partner built our bed as a strange size (Euro King Size) which cost a few hundred pounds + a few mattresses.
Otherwise I think since 2003 we've bought 2x 4 chairs and 2x tables all 2nd hand all under £70 total.
We were lucky our stuff was small in the past and we decided to get a big motability vehicle to fit STUFF in (partner rides recumbent bikes and a streamliner which is like a bike inside a canoe shell) so we can move big stuff like beds which we did for my mum when she did some 2nd hand buying and selling. We're roped in for more of that next week too.
We're cheapskates for sure, but if stuff works and we can "keep it alive" safely, why would we throw it away or replace it.
My sister is Little Mrs Trendy and she replaces the entire house furnishings every few years, often with expensive, hideous AND uncomfortable stuff.
@NatalyaD @afewbugs @Artemis201 leather couches! Expensive and uncomfortable!
Totally agree about furniture.
I'm glad some dumps allow people to take 'working stuff' safely now.
My dad used to sneak stuff out of the tip (and skips at work) in the 80s, he rescued 6 dial-tune B&W TVs and got 3 of them to work long-term with v basic fixing skillz. Family friends, my Gran and we each had one of them running for decades after that.
I hate waste and wish people would give working unwanted stuff to somewhere it can be reused and reloved rather than letting it get wrecked.
My mum has a local charity 2nd hand furniture place that accepts donations and sells.
What they can't resell they dismantle and use the wood to build new stuff like planters etc. They employ and support volunteering from people who have been homeless and in prison I think.
They were SO kind to mum after stepdad died and she was scatty, prone to crying at random and generally acting weird. They carried stuff out to the car, advised her & were just sweet.
I remembered something else we bought, partner's office chair £150ish 2nd hand (they were £800 new). I cheated a bit getting disabled students allowance to buy my chair and desk which were £2000 but are specifically disability costs cos it's a height adjustable one (honestly the best thing ever).
Looks like they don't do the homeless/ex-prison workers but the project but are set up to help poor people people furnish homes
https://www.glossopdalefurniture.co.uk/
But they sell to anyone, so I think they do a mix of low-cost and social/other services can do referrals which is still very important.
@NatalyaD @Artemis201 @afewbugs
As we contemplate selling our house and moving in the next year or so, we're often discussing what's worth taking, and what isn't, and a lot of furniture and appliances fall into the "easier not to take, and just replace cheaply second hand at the other end" category. We'll just donate what we can here, and take the minimum we need to be comfortable while we acquire 'new' stuff later.
@suearcher @Artemis201 @afewbugs
That makes perfect sense, and it means you can keep the stuff you know you definitely like, but get new-to-you stuff that is more suited to your new place and lifestyle.
I think my mum is going to end up living between houses and is trying to get rid of everything she doesn't care about to minimise storage hassle before her new place. Esp now she has the Glossop place to obtain replacement stuff if needed.
@NatalyaD @suearcher @Artemis201 @afewbugs
Many years ago I helped friends move from Yorkshire to north Scotland. I hired a 7.5 ton truck, loaded it full and drove it up there for them. Then drove it back empty.
When they were returning, they flew me from Manchester up to Inverness, where I picked up a 3.5 ton van, and moved them back south again.
The van was not full because they just sold most of their stuff and replaced it afterward they arrived south.
The van was one way hire and just needed to go to a local depot.
Their next move didn't even require my help.
______
Of our move, Sue and I are being brutal about what we are not taking.
I think we are even going to take new Ikea vacuum packed mattresses to save transport space, and leave our old ones behind.
@Maker_of_Things @suearcher @Artemis201 @afewbugs
I guess a lot comes down to whether furniture has sentimental value too. I think When It Was Expensive, it was often an heirloom almost, so had memories regardless of its financial value.
And I must admit I do like some of my inherited furniture and thinking "this was in my bedroom when I was a kid (AND it's useful now)".
I think my parents splitting up means I inherited stuff early when I was skint, that she no longer wanted.
@NatalyaD @Maker_of_Things @Artemis201 @afewbugs
Yes, we've got a few items of sentimental value, and a few more that are downright useful.
We totted up what furniture would be essential to have on Day One, and it's really very little. Beds, chests of drawers. Alfred's Mum needs her chair and a table to eat at. We're used to eating off our knees on our sofas, so we don't even need a dining table (although we have one that we got free, but never had the space to erect)
@afewbugs @NatalyaD @suearcher @Artemis201
This is very true.
When my ex wife and I moved from London to Manchester we found our old wardrobe wouldn't fit up the stairs in our rental house.
I ended up cutting the decorative cornice off the top, and feet off the bottom.
We also struggled moving our big 1930s sofa bed, and had to take out windows to get it in and out.
It was only after the third move that we found it could be taken apart and moved in bits! 😄
@Maker_of_Things @afewbugs @suearcher @Artemis201
I think back in the day all furniture was big/heavy and perhaps poorer people with less stable housing had less of it.
Now we have dismantelable furniture which is less big.
@quixoticgeek @kim @NatalyaD @suearcher @afewbugs @Artemis201
Our bed is one I made from salvaged materials, mostly from mahogany '4x2's and two doors.
It breaks down into:
Headboard
Footboard
3No. long rails
2No. boards (Made from hollow core doors to go under the mattress)
4No. wedges
The only awkward part to move is the superking sized mattress.
I have abandoned the top part which made it into a four poster bed.
@Maker_of_Things @quixoticgeek @kim @NatalyaD @afewbugs @Artemis201
...and the newel post topper ball feet, which made it too high for short legged me to sit on comfortably. But which were handsome.
@suearcher @Maker_of_Things @quixoticgeek @kim @afewbugs @Artemis201
Yes, Kim planned our bed height carefully and it is higher than typical which was optimal for post hip surgery when I was allowed back upstairs.
@Maker_of_Things @suearcher @quixoticgeek @kim @afewbugs @Artemis201
A counter design to the Sue short height challenge.