Crystalizing some principles:
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I thought this was due to landlords, but interior design has been VERY bland for a long time now. Even in single family homes where people ought to feel more free to have some colors without freaking about about "resale value"
Unless one is a "flipper" I think all the focus on resale value is a bit silly. And limiting.
@futurebird have you noticed this trend in like, restaurants and fast casual and such that they've got to redo their buildings to look like gray bland office complexes that don't look like they serve food?
Like I have not been to a panera in years partially because I forget they exist, because all our paneras look like they should be law firms or architectural firms or something.
Are we re-creating the giver? Are we recreating the story beat on neopets I didn't follow that took the color out of everyone and everything?
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@futurebird have you noticed this trend in like, restaurants and fast casual and such that they've got to redo their buildings to look like gray bland office complexes that don't look like they serve food?
Like I have not been to a panera in years partially because I forget they exist, because all our paneras look like they should be law firms or architectural firms or something.
Are we re-creating the giver? Are we recreating the story beat on neopets I didn't follow that took the color out of everyone and everything?
It's like in "Never Ending Story" when "The Nothing" came for the world of fairy tales an imagination.
Gray fake wood floor.
Gray boxes.
Maybe a dark brown accent as a tiny "treat" ... it's supposed to be sophisticated I suppose.And if you make no dangerous choices no one can have an opinion about those choices, right?
(well I can)
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In 30 years someone will be saying you need to tear out your "wood effect" planks for ... whatever they are on to next.
I guess not everyone can see that these are the same thing but from different eras. I will take the older one, please. Because real tile, real wood are not on the table in either case at this price point.
@futurebird
We need to replace our Marmoleum floor soon. It’s gotten so rough it doesn’t look clean even when it is. It’s about 20 yrs old.
I looked into vinyl. It’s tougher than Marmoleum. That fake wood was the only way vinyl was sold, though. To get an actually interesting floor, we’ll have to put in Marmoleum again. -
@futurebird
We need to replace our Marmoleum floor soon. It’s gotten so rough it doesn’t look clean even when it is. It’s about 20 yrs old.
I looked into vinyl. It’s tougher than Marmoleum. That fake wood was the only way vinyl was sold, though. To get an actually interesting floor, we’ll have to put in Marmoleum again.cork?
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cork?
@futurebird
Cork had pretty awful sustainabily and exploitation issues last I checked...
I really wish Marmoleum was tougher. It's pretty and it is pretty much a sustainable product. -
@futurebird
Cork had pretty awful sustainabily and exploitation issues last I checked...
I really wish Marmoleum was tougher. It's pretty and it is pretty much a sustainable product.Where did you hear it wasn’t sustainable compared to wood and why?
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In 30 years someone will be saying you need to tear out your "wood effect" planks for ... whatever they are on to next.
I guess not everyone can see that these are the same thing but from different eras. I will take the older one, please. Because real tile, real wood are not on the table in either case at this price point.
There is a furniture shop in the Bronx that has always baffled me.
But, recently? I had a revelation.
I was baffled because the stuff in their window is so showy and colorful. It’s just not what I’ve been taught to think of as “good design.”
But m, then, I stepped back and considered their prices, the build quality of the furniture— and in that light it’s not that different than IKEA.
In terms of price or functionality or materials.
It just has a very different design agenda.


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There is a furniture shop in the Bronx that has always baffled me.
But, recently? I had a revelation.
I was baffled because the stuff in their window is so showy and colorful. It’s just not what I’ve been taught to think of as “good design.”
But m, then, I stepped back and considered their prices, the build quality of the furniture— and in that light it’s not that different than IKEA.
In terms of price or functionality or materials.
It just has a very different design agenda.


there are definitely other companies trying to be IKEA but with their air of being for a higher class than those filthy poor IKEA customers.
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There is a furniture shop in the Bronx that has always baffled me.
But, recently? I had a revelation.
I was baffled because the stuff in their window is so showy and colorful. It’s just not what I’ve been taught to think of as “good design.”
But m, then, I stepped back and considered their prices, the build quality of the furniture— and in that light it’s not that different than IKEA.
In terms of price or functionality or materials.
It just has a very different design agenda.


This stuff isn’t *my* style at all but I decided to reevaluate my initial impression that it was nonsensical and impractical.
As a western mass producer, IKEA often copies western designer items in wood laminate and plastic. Since I understand what they are trying to do it can sort of make sense— but, I have never seen what *this^ furniture is trying to copy. I am missing the context.
Both places make furniture for middle class people— both are aspirational in their own strange way.
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there are definitely other companies trying to be IKEA but with their air of being for a higher class than those filthy poor IKEA customers.
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This stuff isn’t *my* style at all but I decided to reevaluate my initial impression that it was nonsensical and impractical.
As a western mass producer, IKEA often copies western designer items in wood laminate and plastic. Since I understand what they are trying to do it can sort of make sense— but, I have never seen what *this^ furniture is trying to copy. I am missing the context.
Both places make furniture for middle class people— both are aspirational in their own strange way.
@futurebird Uh, I may be misreading you, but IKEA *is* western.
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@futurebird Uh, I may be misreading you, but IKEA *is* western.
Yes IKEA copies western designer items because they are a western furniture mass producer. And the stuff in the the Bronx imports shop is also mass produced copies but of … something where I have not encountered the “real” version —
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Yes IKEA copies western designer items because they are a western furniture mass producer. And the stuff in the the Bronx imports shop is also mass produced copies but of … something where I have not encountered the “real” version —
@futurebird Right, then I just misunderstood what you meant.

(A while ago, I pondered that "Nordic cyberpunk dystopia" would probably visually look like "The entire world was designed by IKEA".)
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@futurebird Right, then I just misunderstood what you meant.

(A while ago, I pondered that "Nordic cyberpunk dystopia" would probably visually look like "The entire world was designed by IKEA".)
@datarama
Do not utter such horrors …for by describing them, by naming them, we may speak them into being. -
@datarama
Do not utter such horrors …for by describing them, by naming them, we may speak them into being.@futurebird One of the weirdest things about IKEA is that they have exactly two modes of product quality:
- Complete and utter rubbish that will disintegrate if you look at it from a wrong angle.
- Functionally indestructible and will be used as the favoured perching spot of a post-apocalyptic nuclear cockroach in 800 years.And also these are completely decoupled from price.
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@MisuseCase real linoleum is plastic-free https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linoleum @futurebird
@NatureMC @MisuseCase @futurebird
Marmoleum... -
@NatureMC @MisuseCase @futurebird
Marmoleum...@PaulWermer @NatureMC @MisuseCase
Lovely girl’s name: Marmoleum
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@futurebird One of the weirdest things about IKEA is that they have exactly two modes of product quality:
- Complete and utter rubbish that will disintegrate if you look at it from a wrong angle.
- Functionally indestructible and will be used as the favoured perching spot of a post-apocalyptic nuclear cockroach in 800 years.And also these are completely decoupled from price.
@datarama @futurebird Yes! I have some old (maybe 25 years old) Billy bookshelves that are so strong I could knock out a rhino with them. And I bought a Kallax the other day that an ant could lift up and carry off.
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@datarama @futurebird Yes! I have some old (maybe 25 years old) Billy bookshelves that are so strong I could knock out a rhino with them. And I bought a Kallax the other day that an ant could lift up and carry off.
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There is a furniture shop in the Bronx that has always baffled me.
But, recently? I had a revelation.
I was baffled because the stuff in their window is so showy and colorful. It’s just not what I’ve been taught to think of as “good design.”
But m, then, I stepped back and considered their prices, the build quality of the furniture— and in that light it’s not that different than IKEA.
In terms of price or functionality or materials.
It just has a very different design agenda.


@futurebird
This looks like what rooms often looked like in San Francisco in my 20s (30 yrs ago). Furniture and decoration then was the best stuff my friends could find on street corners and in Goodwill stores.
And painting our apartments interesting colors was a relatively cheap way to make spaces our own.