I've never understood why people say IKEA is of low quality. Most of my furniture is from IKEA, and its has lasted for many years with no issues. You don't have to be the type of person who throws away and upgrades often. Nobody forces us be so wasteful.
@as-yu4vk2 жыл бұрын
Right! Most of my furniture that I got about 10 years ago is still fine. Except that one back part of my closet. We got a new one when I moved in together with by bf. The rest has some marks from using and moving several times but this is it!
@nikolagrozdanov45342 жыл бұрын
I’m 14 and my desk is from IKEA and it’s older then me .It looks fine
@AF_18922 жыл бұрын
That is also why I have a Lot of Ikea stuff. Supply chain problems (or just that the Houston Ikea has better stock and I live in Midwest now). Last ikea chest of drawers I did, put Gorilla glue on every seam and anchored it to my my wall. I recommend this for not huge things (like a bed or bedroom storage system). Those are so huge. It would have to be sledgehammer time to move out. I have my king size lack bed from 2007. It has lived in 6 places. I thought gluing it. At the end it's life.
@cammysmith75622 жыл бұрын
I always say IKEA is as good as you build it.
@korhonenemilia18162 жыл бұрын
IKEA has been decreasing in quality, to be honest. They sell fewer and fewer solid wood pieces, choosing to go for the weird wood shavings material, which breaks and scratches very easily. I still have a lot of my IKEA pieces from a decade ago, but somehow my recent furniture pieces just don't hold up despite being treated the same.
@jolenestahn39193 жыл бұрын
I've had my 2 $9.99 LACK tables since 2009, they've come with me through 5 moves across the country (because they are compact to move, easy to take apart and put back together and light so why would I throw them out). They have lasted the 11 years still in excellent condition. If I choose to get rid of them I'm sure I could sell them on facebook market place for what I paid. So in conclusion, my two LACK tables have not been fast furniture - I can't be the only one 😅
@_Kiren_3 жыл бұрын
Yeah. I feel like "fast furniture" is not really a good 1:1 with fast fashion. In my experience they seem to last as opposed to cheap clothes and I can confirm my LACK was easy to sell on marketplace. I suppose the important question is how IKEA can encourage people to use our reuse their stuff for longer and how to monetise it. Also taking a more responsibility of waste management, can furniture be made biodegradable possibly?
@adrienrenaux62113 жыл бұрын
Front LACK table, 11 years is pretty amazing, but for a piece of furniture, it should only be the beginning of it's life. Furniture made before industrialisation can literally last hundreds of years
@emmajofinfer53723 жыл бұрын
Got mine used off fb marketplace and its going strong after 7 years and three moves. You're not the only one.
@supernova6223 жыл бұрын
This is a good point. A lot of Ikea furniture can't really be disassembled once you've put it all together. It just isn't designed to. The LACK tables have such simple construction that they are very easy to break down without damaging the integrity
@Yasaman7283 жыл бұрын
I got mine second hand for free, and they've moved with me so far twice :D
@SandraBlomgren3 жыл бұрын
The ”ugly product names” are Swedish words and citys. Grunka ~ stuff Sniglar = snails Ulriksberg = a small village in Sweden. Every product name make sense in Swedish!
@Szystedt2 жыл бұрын
I’m swedish and have never heard the word grunka lol
@TomyHun2 жыл бұрын
Came off as a bit disrespectful by him to pick on the names. Not everyone is American, sorry there are thousands of other languages out there that sound "weird."
@S4pphire32 жыл бұрын
@@TomyHun ikr, some people are so rude when it comes to other languages and other people's culture :/
@LoskLive2 жыл бұрын
Bolmen.
@ferencpakozdi47602 жыл бұрын
Except door mats. Those are named after danish cities
@kibaanazuka3322 жыл бұрын
If you're wondering for why the IKEA product names exist how they do, it's because the founder had dyscalculia and thought SKU numbers were too difficult to deal with for him to run his company. So IKEA products are generally grouped together into themes of Scandinavian names for things/places (ex. places, lakes, islands, boy names, flowers, etc) as to keep things logical and orderly
@cedarmint73082 жыл бұрын
i think you underestimate how long it’s possible to keep something like this table useful. speaking as someone who lives paycheck to paycheck and rarely has more than $20 to spare for things like household items, stuff like this is kind of my only option so i have to treat it well and keep it until it is physically no longer functional. i think instead of treating cheaply produced furniture as entirely bad, we should encourage people to make what they have last.
@franciscofuentes89162 жыл бұрын
If I buy a table like the one from the video I'd think whether I can keep bringing it with me while I move.
@amirmirzaei3940 Жыл бұрын
bro, why are you even buying furniture if you only have 20$ to spare? I'm not living pay check to paycheck and I didn't spend money on furniture, either got handy downs or second hand ones for like 5$
@rehaking3 жыл бұрын
I'm from Slovakia and our IKEA has some rebuying programme and they recycle a lot of textile products. I actually like how IKEA tries different methods in order to be more sustainable and eco-friendly.
@lindatisue7333 жыл бұрын
Where is the rebuking place at? In Sweden they only have one and it is way out in the country side, two hours from Stockholm.
@mittfh2 жыл бұрын
UK stores are now offering rebuying schemes, while they also have a section next to the checkouts selling damaged but still usable furniture at a discount.
@valentinaabril49802 жыл бұрын
Recycling is actually really un effective for it to be sustainable. Worst of the the three Rs
@inmymumscarbroombroom2 жыл бұрын
Also a Slovak here and I can confirm👍
@ThePhantom45162 жыл бұрын
@@valentinaabril4980 oh so they just shouldn't they do it then
@adrienrenaux62113 жыл бұрын
I'm a woodworker and particularly interested in creating furniture that could last at least a lifetime. Sadly we have shifted our whole idea of furniture as something we keep for 10 or 20 years because styles are changing. They are really only changing because of marketing. So we might think having a LACK table for 15 years means it lasts a long time, but really good furniture could be able to last 10 times longer
@FutureProofTV3 жыл бұрын
This is a really good point!! Thanks for sharing + joining us here 💪
@dykam3 жыл бұрын
Part, personally, is that my requirements change over my life. Either as a I move or because I simply need something else. And Ikea furniture seems to match that pace, when it comes to price. Add to that the simplicity of moving it easily when deconstructed or new. Lifetime furniture is, at least to me, a thing for slightly more privileged people. It's usually bulky, expensive to move, and you need some space in your house. You can buy or sell it second hand, but that too can be quite a pain unless they can be deconstructed. I'd probably be up for buying higher quality furniture, as long as it's still as practical as Ikea. But right now, that's kinda rare.
@lisayist2 жыл бұрын
Most consumers are so disconnected from the products. They don't know where their food come from, they don't know how to maintain furniture, they don't want to put elbow grease on anything.
@adrienrenaux62112 жыл бұрын
I'm in no way a professional so I can't tell you about prices, but labour cost is most of what the thing is worth. A side table doesn't have a lot of materials in it so really the price comes from labour and overhead
@liquidsnake68792 жыл бұрын
Depends on what you want, i prefer a Lack tbh because it's so easy to assemble and disassemble, and i can do it myself very easily so if i need to move it's not a problem. It's a lot more important to me how easy things are to assemble, disassemble and maintain than it is how great the wood is or how rare wax they used is.
@BBoPPo883 жыл бұрын
80% of the Ikea furniture I’ve owned has fallen apart within 5-10 years but other furniture is just so ridiculously expensive now that when you compare it to Ikea prices makes it feel like you’re trying to buy the mona lisa to put under your ass. We should be looking at furniture like investment but I think economically most people are struggling so much right now it’s hard for a lot of people to do that.
@ashleyballard95613 жыл бұрын
Yes! Exactly this!!
@FutureProofTV3 жыл бұрын
Definitely! Thanks for taking the time to comment + tune in here 💪
@DavidSusiloUnscripted2 жыл бұрын
@@FutureProofTV not true. My entire house consists of IKEA furnitures. They are all (except one) 20 years old and one is about 30 years.
@aval50982 жыл бұрын
It definitely depends on the piece and also how you assemble it. We always use wood glue and reinforcements and it makes a huge difference to the sturdiness of the product. Also swapping out knobs or pulls for better looking ones can really change the look of some things.
@strattonflewelling67642 жыл бұрын
@@DavidSusiloUnscripted do you think that the quality was noticeably better 20yrs ago? I wonder if their recent items would last as long (assuming the same careful treatment you’ve shown your furniture)
@noralewis53902 жыл бұрын
My parents had heavy, made to last furniture that was 50+ years old. We had to sell their house, many avoided it because they had no space and neither did we. One thing this appears to not take into account is home type. My parents had a single family home - plenty of space to store large furniture pieces and a culture that largely didn't move, whereas now we have way more renters and apartments. Not many people are going to want to invest a ton of money in something super heavy that they have to move every few years. In this sense, ikea works great for me. I bought the mid-tier version, reinforced it enough to handle moves, and its lasted 4 moves over 10 years just fine with no plans to switch out any of it anytime soon.
@roelh532 жыл бұрын
Picked up a LACK table for free from someone in my street about 8 years ago. Yesterday I gave it away for free so someone else can enjoy it. Those things are quite durable if you handle them well. Let's hope more people sell/give away or buy/take 2nd hand stuff! 😄😄
@jc3drums9162 жыл бұрын
If you have to handle them well, then they are, by definition, not durable.
@Kingkong90992 жыл бұрын
As a woodworker, there is a section called as in at Ikea. There are a bunch of old doors, panels, miss matched cabinets. Plus its super easy to transport. Plus most there older used products are perfectly fine to move. Other then that, ive had a $10.00 lack table since the mid 2000's and its never moved an inch. Also you dont have to be the one to throw the products out just becasue your done with them. Ive seen people donate whole kitchens and bedroom sets to good will and other habitat for humanity projects.
@Stensture22 жыл бұрын
Hey! Great topic and discussion about sustainability, and nice to hear the recommendation about thinking before buying 👍 I’m Swedish and have worked at IKEA for a bit more then six years now. The goal that your talking about ‘people and planet’ says that 100% of the materials should come from renewable and recycled materials. As it stands today in the IKEA production, 60% comes from renewable materials and 10% from recycled, 70%. The “buy back” initiative is getting bigger and bigger at least in Sweden. Guess it takes a while for people to hear about it and use it. The section ‘recovery’ or ‘circular store’ is filled with furnitures that people have either sold back or furnitures from the showroom. Sorry to hear that there is less than 1% in the US that gets ‘recycled’ + the 20% for heating? 21% then. In Sweden 99% of all garbage gets recycled in some form. Sounds like the US should start to get rid of the solution of sending its garbage to landfill… Great video! And good luck with the 50k goal 👍
@RedPixelMage2 жыл бұрын
Big recommendation for Ikea stuff, always check the bargain basement corner. You can find ex-display stuff with a few bumps and scratches at a good price, but more importantly you can find spare parts for next to nothing that you can use to repair what you already have or modify things to better serve your needs.
@ArchangelTyrael26 күн бұрын
Certain parts needed for repair are also sold separately. Stores have sections with screws, and all kinds of loose thing needed for assembly/repair.
@salemccc2 жыл бұрын
My dad has pointed out to me, as a carpenter, the decline of real wood furniture. I think this shouldn't be overlooked when considering how fast we go through furniture. My real wood bookcases are still lasting versus my fiberboard ones, which are much more flimsy and show signs of wear. Just an observation, I don't think ikea furniture is bad or anything. I just bought a bunch.
@mattrubin89 Жыл бұрын
I think it will get to the point where our houses are all cheap plastics, foams and other BS that is only there cause its easy to put up.
@BigFatCone6 ай бұрын
IKEA makes stuff from actual wood as well though,
@ashleyballard95613 жыл бұрын
When my husband and I got out of college, IKEA was all we could afford. That was before we started our low waste journey. I felt uncomfortable buying secondhand furniture at the time. The only furniture in our house that wasn’t IKEA was family hand-me-downs. Now, I would just buy everything secondhand. Furniture is SOOOO expensive. It needs to be seen as an investment since nicer, more expensive, sturdy furniture will obviously last longer. However, people can’t afford it.
@FutureProofTV3 жыл бұрын
Thankfully now there's a surplus of affordable second-hand IKEA furniture available near IKEA locations. Thanks for sharing + tuning in!!
@ashleyballard95613 жыл бұрын
@@FutureProofTV that’s true! Idk about Canada, but here in the US, IKEA stores are buying back used IKEA products and selling them in the store. So you can buy used IKEA products at IKEA. Downsides are if you sell them your used products, you get store credit, which just encourages you to buy more stuff. Also, they are only accepting a very small range of products right now. But I guess it’s at least a step in the right direction? Idk how I feel about it.
@hotelvictortango2 жыл бұрын
@@ashleyballard9561 It depends on how we receive the returns as well. Don't include all the parts in the box? We can't end up building it and selling it in as is, so it becomes a parts bin. We'll receive things that are completely torn apart and try our best to salvage them for parts to build furniture. In the end it doesn't all go into a trash compacter, we have separate metal/wood bins that can go to recycling.
@theresabu30002 жыл бұрын
I live in Germany and bought second hand furniture made by IKEA as a student. It still stands with some grooves - but overall not bad. To repair it (or hide it used hints) is not as easy as full wood furniture - but it could be done. If I had the money I maybe would invest in nice bookshelves, chairs and table - but I'd sooner make it myself than have the money to buy it. It seems more difficult to get older furniture - but in city's together with Carsharing its even possible for students. I would buy directly from people who sell - it's often cheaper.
@rowaystarco Жыл бұрын
In Norway even well paid archtitects have a bunch of IKEA furniture in their homes. Just gotta grab those that are of good quality.
@saragoose3 жыл бұрын
My facebook memories informed me that I bought my couch 13 years ago today. I got a new cover for it (via comfort works) about 3 years ago, as the old cover had faded/worn quite a bit (brown to a bit yellow), but it's otherwise in great shape. I took it apart to move it (and had to to replace the cover) and I don't think I'll get another disassemble/re-assemble out of it, as it's just a tiny bit wobblier now that it used to be. But as I don't plan on moving for a long time, I'm hopeful I'll get 15+ years out of this couch!
@FutureProofTV3 жыл бұрын
Glad to hear that couch has lasted you so long! It's crazy that people don't think to get a cover once their couch gets worn, it makes it last so much longer... Thanks for taking the time to comment + tune in 😜
@saragoose3 жыл бұрын
@@FutureProofTV Ya I can def recommend re-covering couches. If you have one from a chain like Ikea, even if it's discontinued, there's store like Comfort Works that will sell covers for you couch & cushions. I've been super happy with the quality of my cover - I spilled red wine on it the other week and it was so easy to clean off my light grey couch.
@sarahb.38933 жыл бұрын
The real Problem with IKEA furniture, in my eyes, is that they get unstabel if you disassembl them to much. My Mum moved with her IKEA shelfs 3 times now and they will not survive another move. However if you let them be they tend to be extremly stabele for the price tag. I try to buy my Furniture sacond Hand but buying big pices like a couche or a bedframe is a lot of work: renting a big car, Getting friends to help you carry it down from the Xfloor and in to your own home ec. its way easyer to just get it delivered so i understand why people choose this.
@worawatli89522 жыл бұрын
The thing is, most people overtighten, under-tighten them, because of how soft the material is, you need to be precise with tightening them in, preferably with a torque adjustable screwdriver which most people doesn't have access to. It's not just IKEA, but any furnitures made with that material has this problem.
@jfh4002 жыл бұрын
Also, coincidentally, the space between the Lack table legs is almost exactly 19.5", which is the standard width for server racks in datacenters, meaning many many nerds around the world have one or several Lack tables sitting next to our desks with old secondhand servers and network gear sitting on brackets in the legs (aka the "Lack Rack"). You can also 3d print custom brackets to stack multiple Lacks on top of each other for a full height rack.
@AllenHanPR2 жыл бұрын
Those tables are very effective, they only break if you move it too often. Also, keep in mind Sweden is an environmental pioneer. When one of my homies moved to his apartment in DTLA he was so lazy putting together 4 IKEA pieces he asked if I could do it for him, since I have a furniture background. I managed to do it in 30 minutes without instructions and he paid me for my efficiency. They are a great go-to choice for a furniture brand, it really depends on how you treat the furniture you buy from them. Many people don't buy it cause it's cheap, they buy it cause that's all they can afford. Many people are moving into their first home or just getting into college. So don't knock IKEA's position in this world. IKEA goes together like broke college student and cup ramen, borrowing neighbors' wifi and Netflix account, watching on a laptop while sitting on the floor with the laptop on the $10.00 idea table. It's the foundation for a more stable financial future. I worked at a furniture company where our competitor and we priced the same style table for $600.00. That is not ideal for the common consumer. Shit, we even shipped one to Casey Neistat, but even he said tables shouldn't cost that much.
@eliset7512 Жыл бұрын
This table arrived well packaged and on time. kzbin.infoUgkxn94T8Mu1iMnsLCMNOI9srXSsLkI4JXKW Like another reviewer advised, I pulled everything out and made sure everything was included (everything was!). I built it alone and it took me about an hour. The color is great and for the price the lift part works well. As others have mentioned, it’s not the smoothest opening/closing, but it works. The screws do show, but I plan to order white sticker covers if that bothers us too much. Really happy with this table! UPDATE: it’s been over a year since we got this coffee table and we still love it! It gets HEAVY use as our dining table, foot rest, and school desk. Over time, the opening and closing mechanism has gotten smoother. I added a new photo with the white screw cover stickers. They blend in perfectly and make it look a little cleaner. 100% recommend!!!
@fayzi3D2 жыл бұрын
Great video and love your channel. As someone who has experience with IKEA, allow me to put my two cents. You mention IKEA as a "King of Fast Furniture" and the need to have constant product turnover to maintain its position as the world’s largest furniture seller does not hold true to the vision and culture of IKEA. There is never any intention on IKEA's part to create a product with a short life span to encourage people to replace it with a newer one when it is unusable. “Throw-away” products are not IKEA's way. This is a testament laid on stone by Ingvar Kampard himself that vastly communicated and understood by IKEA designers and co-workers. The fact is that LACK is created as a lower entry point for people searching for a side-table. It is targeted at students, graduates, younger people, or lower-income people. With the low price point, it has the potential to reach as many people as it can (to align with IKEA's vision: “To create a better everyday life for the many people.”). For the people with mid and high-income levels, IKEA created a different side-table with better looking and greater quality like Borgeby or Lisabo (with a better margin of course). The mentality of IKEA designers is always to start with the price first and build the product accordingly. If at $9.90 price point, the designers manage to find material that can last for a hundred years, they are more than happy to go with it. Unfortunately, the material needed for a side-table to last for hundred years will force it to be priced multiple times and thus prevent it from reaching as many people. Regarding sustainability, it is a challenge for the designers to find a better solution in order to reach the target by 2030. It is worth noting that sustainability has always been one of a pillar and part of the Democratic Design principle that IKEA designers and the company adhered to.
@888SpinR2 жыл бұрын
To assemble Ikea furniture you read it like a comic book, to disassemble read it like a manga
@rin552 жыл бұрын
Indeed 😄👍
@kriscox40193 жыл бұрын
I’m super interested to see what ikea does in the future with its sustainability because unlike the H&M’s of the world, Ikea is not a publicly traded company and therefore doesn’t have to answer to public shareholders the same way.
@FutureProofTV3 жыл бұрын
OooOo hadn't even thought of this! Very interesting indeed...
@travelwithdubs2 жыл бұрын
"Answer to public shareholders" hahahahahahahahahaha actually public companies don't care about anything but shareholder returns.
@tohagan122 жыл бұрын
IKEA often leads the way in sustainability and as someone else commented it's because they DON'T have to answer to shareholders who would rather see an extra 20mil put into their dividends than developing sustainable products
@kriscox40192 жыл бұрын
@@travelwithdubs exactly!
@kriscox40192 жыл бұрын
@@tohagan12 exactly!
@AronSeifert2 жыл бұрын
My parents have had their 2 lacks for 25 years. I myself own a recycled one which is 10 years old. Ikea isn’t hard to assemble compared to other stores if you read the manual carefully and their furniture can survive moving multiple times. …as Long as you aren’t American I guess.
@Haziqonfire3 жыл бұрын
I’ve had multiple Lack tables and I have to say, they last a long time. That said though, it’s 100% true that disassembling IKEA furniture is a pain in the butt and is likely on purpose. The cost, and ease of just hoping over to an IKEA and buying a new table instead of bothering moving your $10 Lack table is more likely.
@FutureProofTV3 жыл бұрын
Exaaacly, for $10, who's gonna form enough of an emotional attachment to move it to a new place? Unless they paint something cool on it, like a dragon or something... that'd be worth keeping. Thanks for tuning in !!😜
@treasurewuji87402 жыл бұрын
Moving from one state to another. You want the cheapest U haul possible. What do you toss out? You leave it on the side of the road so you don’t have to make another drive.
@kampaboy81432 жыл бұрын
In my mind the disassembly of most ikea furniture is pretty easy. The only annoying thing are nails that hold the backboards of Billy shelves... the rest is literally unscrewing the metal locking mechanism screw and pulling it apart. Then take the screws etc out and u are done.. most of it is a piece of cake lol
@coolestto2 жыл бұрын
@@FutureProofTV don't understand how you can say assembly is so easy it's a "participation ribbon," but simultaneously it is so hard to take apart that nobody would bother to figure out how to move with it and would instead buy a new one. Literally just unscrew the legs, I've done it multiple times with mine. Idk maybe the people you know just have a lot more money to throw around than the ones I do, because nobody I know would throw out a perfectly good table and buy another identical one because it's just too stressful to figure out how to reverse the 1 step building process. $0 < $10
@Carterthielftw_2 жыл бұрын
Fun Fact! This table has legs that are perfectly spaced out for 19" rackmount server hardware, so its used in the Homelab community as a cheap server rack for lighter equipment
@Not313372 жыл бұрын
Came looking for the Lack Rack comments! Some people have stacked them even.
@handle535 Жыл бұрын
Yeah that is literally why I have one - not because I needed it for that purpose but my friend did. He no longer needed it and was just going to throw it out so I took it to avoid it just going to landfill.
@snuzzbobble2 жыл бұрын
Re the buyback programme: Our local IKEA (in the UK) has a secondhand section, where you can browse and purchase the items from the buyback programme. Also agree with one of the comments above re moving with IKEA stuff - I've found they've been more likely to follow me when moving because they're easy to assemble/disassemble and pack flat, which was easier to put into storage etc when I wasn't sure where I'd be living next, + was easier to bring with me when moving once or twice a year while a student
@stuartwgermain3 жыл бұрын
I am one of the few people who loves putting together complicated pieces of ikea furniture. There are lots of things that can be done with old ikea furniture. I bought a bunch of panels from their as is section and built a shelf out of them. I try and buy Form their as is or off marketplace.
@FutureProofTV3 жыл бұрын
Haha it's definitely fun if you aren't the easily-frustrated type. Glad to hear it!!
@ZMan492jj2j22 жыл бұрын
95-99% of furniture you see in any furniture store is now made from particle board and fiber board. The same stuff IKEA uses for its furniture. It has been a race to the bottom as companies realize people care more about price than quality.
@michaelyun24072 жыл бұрын
Older Ikea funturine is not bad actually. The computer desk my dad bought from Ikea is 20+ years still going strong after several moves. Frame is made of steel and the wood is hardwood. Super heavy to move too
@LaurenDouglas2 жыл бұрын
I have 11 lack tables(the 18x18) in my apartment. We use them as bedside tables, shelves, and coffee tables. We bought most of them in 2017/2018. I have only replaced one we used as a coffee table and we still use it elsewhere since it was only cosmetic. We love them because if they get scratched or damaged who cares they were only $5-10. We stacked two and have it in a corner by a computer desk. Hides a garbage can on the floor, holds an all in one printer in the middle that is still usable, and a lamp on top. I have two of them side by side in my closet, and also as snack storage. Using as coffee tables is great because they’re very easy to move. I don’t understand how people say IKEA is junk. Try buy a similar item for the same price from Walmart or target. I doubt it’ll hold up as well as IKEA when moved.
@sal_alaa2 жыл бұрын
Each country gives a very different perspective on Ikea. Here in Egypt, that table costs ~19USD with its bigger sister costing ~$65. Not the most expensive in general but too expensive for what it is. I still know a couple who own it, but most people would rather pay a bit more and get high quality local furniture that would last for generations
@tesshiva2 жыл бұрын
We bought two Hemnes bureaus as a temporary fix when we moved, and I swore we would upgrade when we got settled. Turns out, they’re actually quite nice. Very durable, nice black grain finish, decent drawer runners. They can scratch easily, so we added tempered glass on the tops. Years later, we still love them. IKEA doesn’t necessarily translate to disposable fast fashion.
@Phalaenopsisify3 жыл бұрын
Please don't call words or place names ugly. The Swedish language is a beautiful thing if you take time to learn it. That was not to your usual high standard :( But yes, I've had and still have a lot of IKEA pieces, some are better than other. The most annoying thing is the lack of spare parts, like that glass lampshade where I had to buy an entirely new lamp when the glass broke. Unfortunately IKEA is so prevent in Sweden it's hard to find anything else if you're not made of money, even the secondhand furniture is IKEA and it gets old really fast to scroll past a million Lack tables.
@FutureProofTV3 жыл бұрын
Hey yeah, that bit was in poor taste! Thanks for pointing that out to us, we'll make sure to be more sensitive in the future with our choice of words, so we're culturally respectful moving forward. We didn't even consider the lack of spare parts, that must be super annoying. Thank you for taking the time to comment + tune in here!!
@bruceh41802 жыл бұрын
Aren't a lot of the furniture names made up by Ikea? I'm always seeing posts about random words becoming a table name or even made up words altogether.
@Phalaenopsisify2 жыл бұрын
@@bruceh4180 Nope, most product names are real words we use every day! Some are made up but that's because in Swedish you can make legit words as you wish, we're very good at making words switch classes. So a noun can become a verb and vice versa. And when the product names aren't regular words they are real place names, places which exist on a map and where real people live.
@Phalaenopsisify2 жыл бұрын
@@bruceh4180 for example the popular commode with the name Malm, that's a real word which means ore. Probably inspired by the great mine in Kiruna.
@Weisz2 жыл бұрын
I actually got one of these for free! From an ikea pop up shop in chicago
@sadedx2 жыл бұрын
I started watching you when you had 25k subs
@TheLikeys2 жыл бұрын
True that - I have accumulated 3 LACK tables all of which now scattered through my house.. here in German the table costs only 6€ so it feels even cheaper Still there are plenty of ikea products around me and my family which are getting older but are still in use.. my grandma has a ikea kitchen since I was born and my parents billy shelf is still in use and hasn’t even aged badly - of course there are some pieces of furniture that are changed out more often but in my personal experience the ikea stuff is actually holding up some times.. but still I’d a knowledge ikea invites you to change up your home more easily through the low prices..
@CamdenBloke2 жыл бұрын
Honestly, I brought my Ikea furniture with me when I moved about 2,000 miles. I certainly not ever purchased it with the intent of getting rid of it. I have lately been shifting my home and Home furnishing to more for mid-century style so some of my furniture has been moved out of the more visible rooms, but I put them other places that they can serve pure utility. I've also wrapped one of my Ikea desks with wood grain contact paper to get it closer to the style without having to replace it because it's really the perfect size and shape and so on for where it is.
@Darkmausi2 жыл бұрын
The table is cheap, flexible and custumizable. I coloured mine in different shades of gold, gave it an antique look and already used it for different purposes (it was a coffee table, a plant plateau, a desk, a dining table ...)
@irisangelina2 жыл бұрын
Love the video. But calling another language ugly because it's different was a bit cringe.
@BB-wl8qr3 жыл бұрын
My lack side tables went through about 12 years and 1 move with us. I found them to be unnecessary so I put them on the curb for someone else to take and enjoy (they were in great condition) Gone within 10 mins🙂 here our curb is 'free' and is only trash if we leave it out on the specific day and put a garbage sticker on it so just my effortless version of free facebook marketplace lol
@folke10143 жыл бұрын
Eamon and Bec! 😂 That episode was hilarious
@jakenjoi2 жыл бұрын
Ironically, I had a Billy bookshelf (probably called something different back then but white laminated MDF bookshelf) from my childhood, moved it to another state, then to my first apartment, and then to my first house! By the time it retired, it was over 30 years old and survived 4 moves. I didn't want to keep it because it didn't fit the aesthetic of the new house which had loads of built in bookshelves. Truthfully, the style and pace of US lifestyle tends to render the need for new furniture more often than the furniture actually wearing out. Everyone hops around jobs more frequently which leads to us moving around more. There is terminology in engineering called "edge of failure" that is important to understand. What that means in this case is that you want your engineered design to simply last the allotted time/conditions it was designed for. If people don't keep furniture longer than 10 years, then you want to design furniture with an edge of failure a little over a decade. What's worse than throwing away furniture every 10 years? Throwing away furniture that would last 100 years every 10 years. This altruism is applied to everything from packaging materials to electronics. They're all designed to spec factoring in a variety of conditions, and that's why we don't have a cast iron overbuilt cell phone like something from the industrial era (among other reasons) because the casing would outlast the very lifespan of the internal components inside.
@19Nadia872 жыл бұрын
I got two of these for free to use in my studio after finding them being thrown out. They were still in really good condition! Repainted both in a gloss black because the pink was too bright and didn't fit in with the monochrome decor. Now 1 of the tables is being used for a mini fridge which is the perfect height 😀
@kathryncryts55373 жыл бұрын
I was very grateful that when I found out IKEA wasn’t a sustainable company that I had never personally shopped at IKEA (What I first heard about IKEA is that they participated in the past in illegal logging). With that being said though, I have bought furniture in the past that I wish I had bought from a more sustainable company or second hand. But I’m continually trying to grow and be more conscious of my decisions, and I’m always grateful for videos like this
@FutureProofTV3 жыл бұрын
That's what it's all about! Thanks for the support, Kathryn!!
@psiholog.matei.gabriela2 жыл бұрын
ikea's use of wood from illegal logging is not just a thing of the past unfortunately
@Fanatic172 жыл бұрын
The only lack I own was gifted to me by another roommate that was moving out as I was moving in. I still use it after 8 years after I moved
@skyearthocean58153 жыл бұрын
Yup, I've got one. I think another component to IKEA is transportability. I drive a sedan, some people have no car at all, I'm single so it's often a pain to find someone to help me carry furniture. IKEA stuff is disassembled, so I can almost always get it in my car and into my house, perhaps using a dolly for the latter. I did however recently buy a classic dresser and table from a freind who's downsizing to move to Europe and owns a truck though. He drove it to me and helped me carry it into my place.
@Gabrielgrassmayr2 жыл бұрын
“The ikea effect” is genius
@EK633153 жыл бұрын
Hey Levi, in regards to the items that they buyback (mentioned at 6:42), in that paragraph you're reading they mention their Circular Hub, which is located at the back of the material pick-up area near the cash in most stores. This area has a bunch of already-assembled IKEA furniture that was returned or sold back now available to customers for cheaper, as well as spare pieces that people returned if they didn't need. I really like this approach by IKEA and I think it at least takes a step in the right direction sustainability wise. I personally used the buyback program when they were offering 1.5x the value on a TV stand I wasn't going to use anymore and it was in good enough shape for another IKEA customer to use it. Also, I was a Lack owner myself but funny enough my Lack came with a missing screw and I never bothered to go get an extra from IKEA so I just had a wobbly Lack. Served me well in my old apartment but when I moved it was the only piece of furniture I tossed. However I have reused all my other IKEA furniture since then - my Malm bed frame, my PAX wardrobe, and my Idasen desk. So the disassembling and reusability factor is there for sure. In my experience after buying dinner chairs from The Brick, IKEA stuff is better designed for the price because they are making their products with customer assembly in mind, so their pieces have to be properly built/crafted, whereas my items from The Brick were warped and crookedly designed. Overall I am a huge fan of IKEA as a lower-budget consumer because they give people unique opportunities to build and layout their spaces in ways that suit them, which can even lend nicely to minimalist and space-saving consumers, which is part of the sustainability mindset. So even if it doesn't invoke sustainability for all, it does for many over equal-priced competitors.
@jonevansauthor2 жыл бұрын
By the way, one search on Google and I found we can recycle MDF now, and we need only build the first plants to do it. Which is kind of true of most waste we produce - it isn't recycled because there simply isn't a recycling plant within a reasonable distance that can handle it. Not to mention that all the people in the comments who apparently break their IKEA furniture are being pretty careless with it. It's absolutely tough enough to survive, if treated as you should treat furniture. I'd wager they also think you can't read a book without breaking the spine.
@serenafoster65292 жыл бұрын
Did he just say the Swedish language is ugly?
@clairep.ronalds8972 жыл бұрын
I got a Lack with the lower shelf out of a trash pile, and goodness, I love that table. Rock solid, totally free to me, and the perfect size for my intended use.
@peadar-o2 жыл бұрын
When it comes to the construction/ deconstruction, download the manual and save it in the cloud. I tend to use the paper ones after construction to line the bottom of my bins to prevent bin soup leakage. The items themselves will move with people if they were bought with care as opposed to a temporary fix. I own expensive items (clothing, furniture etc) as well inexpensive ones, and I take care of them because they cost me money, my own hard earned money. Others might not be wired that way, but that isn’t always to do with a manufacturer wanting to make a profit. People like bargains, be it new things, or second hand. We just need to figure out how to mix new and second hand spending to keep the planet a liveable place. Another thing is that sometimes people will see an item they want, and compare second hand price to new price and with a small difference in price, choose the brand new one as opposed to the second hand. The psychology behind that needs to be explored as well to try and change people’s view of buying second hand as opposed to new. The inexpensive items from ikea however, with the variety of price ranges, tap into many individual considerations beyond price & budget.
@turquoisebubbles20422 жыл бұрын
It’s the only ikea furniture I have and I use it as my craft table . Had it for yearsssssss , easy to move around , put together and take apart and pull out when needed .
@Mery1433413 жыл бұрын
That reference to Eamon & Bec was lit 😆
@FutureProofTV3 жыл бұрын
That video was hilarious 🔥
@borg386 Жыл бұрын
Best table ever! And they also have glossy versions of the small table. Too bad they don't offer a glossy coffee table.
@immeremma3 жыл бұрын
Absolutely love some of the discontinued Ikea furniture I've bought used. Some very well designed pieces and durable pieces have been offered over the years. My favorite piece is the round NORDEN table - solid birch and I got it for 20€.
@svjetlixoxo26482 жыл бұрын
When you look at affordable furniture there is a wide variety of quality and design. More expensive doesn't mean higher quality, especially in the lower budget area. Sometimes it's just: "this colour is more in trend at the moment so we will charge you 15$ more for it". What ia sustainable and profitable to produce isn't decided by the consumer. It's decided by governments, destrebution possibilities, what materials get more or less taxed, what is supported by incentives etc.. the end consumer buys what they can afford. For now we can afford a 10$ table that will serve us a few years and look nice.
@PigeonCarriere3 жыл бұрын
I've gotten too many of these types in both sizes for either $5 or free. I feel so called out. I do however try and buy second hand furniture (when it can be bought that way) when I can. Most of our living room is FB marketplace finds.
@Eva-y3k9x2 жыл бұрын
The way America works is so fascinating and so different, man. I'm from Russia, but I'm sure I can speak for most of the ex ussr countries. We rarely move, most of the ppl own theis places or rent for very long periods of time, so I have lived in this apartment for my entire life. So as the furniture. Soviet cabinets, different units of cabinets, shelves... The wardrobe was given to us by a family member, the beds has been here for A WHILE, man. A lot of the furniture are considered antics already, lol. They are usually given a fresh little new coat of paint every other decade and that's it.
@purplegrrl7113 жыл бұрын
The furniture is named after places in Sweden
@mirandas.77422 жыл бұрын
I really liked this video, and how it's made me reflect on the way I buy and use products-especially furniture. I've been very guilty of getting a cheap piece to just throw it away the first convenient moment, without considering the impact that makes.
@JoelK19913 жыл бұрын
Well, Ikea have a lot of good quality stuff as well, real hard wood furniture. The thing is they cost a lot. The flat pack make them really efficient to transport as well. You might say, but Joel you're Swedish and bias and all and to that I say: yes, yes I am
@lindatisue7333 жыл бұрын
Real hard wood furniture? They have some pine junk and some veneers glued on to chip board. IKEA hasn't had hard wood for more 10 years.
@JoelK19913 жыл бұрын
@@lindatisue733 well, you're wrong they do have furniture made out of real wood just not the cheap stuff. I was at IKEA s couple of weeks ago and saw a lot of furnitures put of real wood
@epettersson802 жыл бұрын
“Ugly product names” As a swede I am deeply offended 😤😂😂
@knightbear493 жыл бұрын
I’m interested in why you left out the AS-IS department from this analysis. They resell used displays and returned items at a discount to customers.
@Julia-hs9og2 жыл бұрын
IKEA has started to buy used furniture from consumers here in Sweden. You enter the product code and the condition of the item, and you get a valuation right away. Then you take your furniture piece to the warehouse and get a gift card according to the valuation.
@jeansafron85683 жыл бұрын
Idk. If it’s our fault that that there is so much furniture is in dump. I feel like now days most people are throwing out their parents or grandparents stained and damaged couches. At least that is my take.
@FutureProofTV3 жыл бұрын
That's definitely a factor, too! Thanks for tuning in 👍👏
@lindatisue7333 жыл бұрын
It is our fault. I live at an apartment complex with about 100 apartments, that has a recycling building. There is always furniture dumped in the burn bin. When ever people move out there are usually 4-10 pieces of furniture thrown out, mostly IKEA stuff.Lucky for me I haven't had to buy any furniture or house hold plastic in the 10 years I have lived there. Also haven't had to buy any electronic cords or light fixtures.
@PJElliot2 жыл бұрын
I have an Ikea storage units which is now around 25 years old and looks like new. I do think the newer items are more of a composite construction when compared to the older designs, but I feel they offer the best value in new wood furniture.
@Onomatopoeia4u2 жыл бұрын
You also have to take into account that people move much more frequently than they ever did in the 60's. The stats aren't entirely from flimsier furniture. That being said I've thrown away my fair share of ikea furniture 😅
@heroninja11252 жыл бұрын
The reason Ikea is so good, you can fit an entire bunk bed table and chairs with a hammock all into the back of a van, for the same price of a bed at a furniture store that would require an entire moving truck just to transport it to your house. Sure that one bed might be better in quality or aesthetic but the functionality is going to be the same. But considering how much you can get from an Ikea for so little and how portable it is to have it dis assembled in boxes. It is the most economical and best option for almost all middle/lower class people
@MayTheSchwartzBeWithYou2 жыл бұрын
It's stupid to blame IKEA for consumers wasting their furniture. People deciding something isn't worth transporting just because it costs so little to rebuy is not "planned obsolescence"; it's consumer laziness.
@elliemelmoth13782 жыл бұрын
Thrift stores can also have pretty cool furniture. I got my favorite table from one last year and it’s always not too hard to repaint or stain them
@luriglilleskutt3 жыл бұрын
Hehe, I was wondering when the "crown jewel" of Sweden would be the focus of this channel! Accually, worked at Ikea for a while! (Haha, like a real true Swede.) I also realized we still have a Lack table (thought we had tossed it out a while ago - my partner was sick of it), but it is hidig under our printer! Thanks for helping me find it xD (Accually had to go and look for it in our small apartment). So our Lack is still in service! :D Thanks for another great and needed episode. Would love another ep about IKEA but maybe more focused on their production-chain and the lack of trasparency. Why: I tried to find out where their linen (as in the fabric) comes from and how its produced... but they keep that information very far away of their potential costumers xD (got suspisious because their products cost often more then half of other linen-bedding...). Still havent got an answer on where its from and how their linen is produced... (did try to contact them). Ps...Would be privileged to help with Swedish pronunciation "if" needed, but did enjoy watching you give it a go! 🤣
@FutureProofTV3 жыл бұрын
Happy you've enjoyed our content, we'll add that to our future videos ideas list! 🔥
@AWillems343 жыл бұрын
You should do a video on Pivot furniture subscription! It’s like Netflix… but for furniture. They make and repair the furniture in house and rent it out on a monthly basis; if you rent for long enough to pay the purchase price then it’s yours.
@Obie.2 жыл бұрын
Making fun of another cultures language was unnecessary...
@modlsuper2 жыл бұрын
This table's my favorite true Not heavy, easy to use. I love it 😂
@brittanyleondike48232 жыл бұрын
When I move out all my stuff was ikea, from my bed to my desk and yes my nightstand. When they break my plan is to go to a local second hand future place. I’ve only had to replace one thing so far in 4 years and 3 moves. And only because it broke when I moved.
@matrix89342 жыл бұрын
When we needed more small tables at a party, we literally went to IKEA bought 10 of them and did a competition who can assembly one fastest
@DanniEfraim2 жыл бұрын
Here in Sweden, the energy recycling they’re talking about is actually a very viable option. We burn trash of all kinds in cogeneration plants, generating electricity and heat with an efficiency of up to 95%. Virtually nothing goes to landfills - we even import trash from other countries to fuel those plants. You should make a video about it!
@BitGladius2 жыл бұрын
I wouldn't say it's intended to be disposable, it's cost engineered to a fault. Mid to high end Ikea stuff is still cheap for furniture, but is fairly sturdy. I have an MCM chair similar to one other places sell for $600 that was $200 - They "cut corners" by using a less popular (but harder) hardwood for the decorative parts, and they eliminated some of the decorative structural wood on the back and used 2x4 instead. None of this makes it any less effective or durable as furniture. It's only a problem when they try to hit a price point that can't be hit without major cuts. There's a place for the cheap-but-good furniture, I moved cross country right after college, and at least wanted a bed and a desk for my place. There are used options, but that's a lot less reliable especially in smaller cities - I could cross my fingers for cast off heirloom furniture I won't want to get rid of immediately, or I buy trusty MDF and veneer that I've kept for 2 moves, including cross country.
@juetli49892 жыл бұрын
Id like to point out that in my country, ikea isnt considered cheap. Not the most expensive either but yeah. also Zara is considered fancy here. Its kinda crazy to see how people from other countries see it.
@Zeverinsen2 жыл бұрын
At home we now have 3 Lack tables after I moved and left mine. They're all between 5 and 10 years old, and have lasted through thick and thin! Great tables to have if you have multiple children, because they're easy to move and disassemble if needed.
@Krisztian082 жыл бұрын
It's literally in the living room in my grandma's house. I see it every time I go there, I even sleep on the couch-bed thing next to it
@TheWtfnonamez2 жыл бұрын
I even knew what it was called before the video ran. I own 2 small and 2 large lack tables. They are dirt cheap solutions to a particular range of furniture problems. I have a lot of gaming consoles and some other PC equipment that sometimes needs to be moved around. These things are light, easy to move, cheap and shockingly robust because of the thick pillar legs. The large one will easily take a 50inch tv, with enough space for 4 consoles on the shelf. I think a lot of people are like me ... they have a problem, go to the ikea catalogue, and quickly realise that the Lack table is the cheapest, fastest solution to their problem.
@I_Am_SciCurious Жыл бұрын
I owned an IKEA kitchen in Germany for 20 years and it was in excellent condition the day I left the country. Not a single thing ever broke. I bought it at IKEA because to change the look of your kitchen all you had to do was swap out the fronts. All the other parts could stay in place. I never did swap out the fronts, but I would buy a new kitchen for my place in the US from IKEA in a heartbeat.
@aurelijusap2 жыл бұрын
well... MFC boards (furniture board with like small wood chips) are actually party recyclable. They are crushed and reused in new board production.
@anomiSia1002 жыл бұрын
I have been living for a year in 25m2 flat with my bf and 2 turtles with big tanks... The lack was the best table we could fit in this place. And it was fine :) now we are in a way bigger space, and I use parts from this table as a tank stand. After some time I've missed Lack and buy another for my balcony. Really there is no better furniture at this price.
@AgentOrange962 жыл бұрын
I have the Walmart equivalent. Basically the same thing, though at twice the cost. (Man, I feel like such a sucker now!) As you might guess, I bought it because it was cheap. I was pretty much dirt poor at the time and needed furniture. I find it absolutely hilarious that it's made of literal cardboard with some veneer on it. But there's something endearing about that for all the wrong reasons! When I moved to the house I bought recently though, oh I kept it! It still features prominently in my living room. I had to buy rubber pads for the feet because it's too light to stay in place on the "wooden" floor, but my shitty cardboard coffee table was not getting tossed! Honestly, at some point I do want to get nicer furniture for my living room, but I do actually have a plan for it once that time comes. And even if I didn't, I'd just put it on NextDoor for free and someone would get some use out of it. Though what happens when they're done with it would be unknown.
@StoneyAcresGardening3 жыл бұрын
Levi, I'd love to see a video on Adidas. It seems like they are making an effort, I'd love to know how much of it is green washing and how much is real.
@FutureProofTV3 жыл бұрын
We may have a video that interests you in the works currently! 😉😅 Thanks for the suggestion + for tuning in!!
@tinybird2413 Жыл бұрын
This is so funny, I have the entire set: the coffee table , the side table and the tv stand . I had moved in to my first 1 bedroom apartment and had a tight budget. They've been with me for 5+ years. The coffee table has suffered some scuffs but it's been fantastic. I also bought two bookshelves from them for a mere $25 each. If I have to move, they are definitely going to whoever wants them in the building. The furniture is very easy to take care of. I haven't had any problems. Ikea furniture often shows up in second hand listings as well. All my friends have some of the shelves (one bought theirs second hand) The furniture we got was very much worth it.
@joermnyc3 жыл бұрын
I made it a point to figure out how to shortcut my way through the IKEA in Brooklyn to get in and out of there (or at least to the checkout line) quickly. The best thing about their stuff is that they are open about what materials are used, so I tried to go for something that was all metal, or all non-composite wood. Honestly the best thing I got fro IKEA is a plush almost life sized Husky for my daughter from the kid’s toy section, she loves it, named it Blizzard.
@FutureProofTV3 жыл бұрын
Shoutout to Blizzard! Thanks for sharing, we appreciate the support 👍
@MilleM-id3yr2 жыл бұрын
The ikea shown at 8:45 is in Tampa, FL!! It's crazy seeing my neighborhood ikea and the major landmarks like McKay Bay and the toll road in the background. It also has the new apartments that were built semi-recently!! In any case, really great video! I learned a lot. I go to ikea with my partner as a hobby just to look at furniture displays and now I know better than to buy them because of their cheap and un-recyclable materials. Thank you for this great piece of informative journalism!
@leonieschwetje7193 жыл бұрын
I would love a video specifically about Ikeas sustainability claims, and how the keep up to them. They present themselves as social and environmental cautious on so many levels, and I'd live to know if it's true..
@FutureProofTV3 жыл бұрын
We'll add it to our list of video ideas! Thanks for the suggestion, Leonie
@RogerFecher3 жыл бұрын
As someone who is trying to be more intentional with the items I purchase and use, I'd love to see a video on sustainable fashion - how a minimalist wardrobe and consideration for cost per wear can help you be more intentional with purchases (and even save money in the long term). Along this line, I'd be particularly interested in hearing a future proof take on the sustainability of something like a leather jacket and or leather boots. They're hard wearing long term use items, but they also take a lot of resources to produce. How is this determination impacted by procuring a boot like your Blundstones that can't be resoled vs Viberg that can. I, for one, would love to hear about how the minimal/intentional practices that I've been adopting can be shaped for a more sustainable future.
@FutureProofTV3 жыл бұрын
These are amazing suggestions Roger! Thanks for taking the time to comment, we'll definitely add them to our future video ideas list 👏
@redballthing2 жыл бұрын
IKEA stuff are just so so good. Although they may not be the best for the price, they are certainly one of the most minimalistic and actually good looking furniture. 80% of my room is IKEA (bunk bed frame, matress, blanket, table, cupboard, I have two IKEA wall ledges, one KALLAX) and I'm still actively working to make that 100%!
@EvanC8812 жыл бұрын
A huge consideration for me when I buy furniture is - can it move with me? I have moved 5 times in the last 3 years due to financial and personal life instability. I'm currently planning to move into an apartment on the 3rd floor of a building with a narrow staircase and no elevator. I would LOVE to buy nice, timeless pieces, but even secondhand and cheap, they're just not possible for me. No way they will fit up the stairs. No way they will come down. No way I can afford to rent a moving truck when I next have to move.
@Kandisz_nora2 жыл бұрын
I own a Klippan couch (leather, red), 4 Billy bookshelves, 2 Poang armchairs and a LACK table among many other IKEA furniture. Guess what? They are all coming with me to my new flat because despite the 10+ years I've owned them they are still in perfect condition. You just have to take care of your furniture, really.
@rin552 жыл бұрын
That's what I love to hear
@yellowdeli2 жыл бұрын
Another interesting benefit of the LACK side table is that it’s dimensions perfect fit rack mounted servers and some people turn them into server racks dubbed the “LACK Rack”.
@sildarmillion2 жыл бұрын
I've bought a lot of stuff from Facebook marketplace because I didn't want to buy new furniture when I knew I wasn't going to live at my current place for that long. But it can take so long to find something I actually like. And when I do find something I like, 80% of the time it's already been sold. Also, I don't have a car, so that means I can only buy furniture from people willing to deliver it.
@Rolerunner3 жыл бұрын
It just does not compute that people would only keep a furniture item for a couple of years! You've confirmed my suspicions about IKEA's recyclability too, so I'll definitely be re-painting/purposing my items when they eventually wear out!
@FutureProofTV3 жыл бұрын
Imagine not only keeping the furniture for only two years, but then throwing it away after that instead of re-selling. Crazy crazy stuff!
@heidiscarrott918310 ай бұрын
Because they are cheap, sturdy and useful. Also, you can paint them and upcycle them. I painted one with black board paint and my children love using it with chalk.