I took my first trip to The Container Store today! How exciting! I know, trading one evil for another? I originally went to get some drawer liners, but ended up getting a new dish rack. My old one, yes, you guessed it, was Ikea. Not only was it starting to fall apart, but it also took up precious counter space.
So, I got this one.
It fits in the sink! And since I have a double sink, how cool is that? Granted, it won't fit as much as the old rack, but my condo did mystifying-ly come with a dishwasher (the kitchen is literally less than 21 square feet) so there is not much need for a dryer, and now I get more counter space...yay!
Can you spot all the Ikea items in these photos?
Scroll down for the answer....
Photo No. 1:
1. The dish rack...that's a give away
2. The Ikea salad bowl
3. The Ikea dish and bowl
4. The Ikea cheese grater
Photo No. 2
1. The Ikea dish in the sink (left sink)
2. Ikea Henkrik stools
3. Expedit visible in the background
2 and 3 are hard to spot unless you know my place. :-)
Did I miss anything? Let me know!
deikea
Thursday, April 28, 2011
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
The easy things...
A lot of what I have is furniture, and not that easy nor practical to rid myself of; but there are some easy trinkets or purchases that were even a mystery to me that I can hand over to the Salvation Army without much effort or cost of replacement.
Pot holders. Yes. Even the pot holders... But, as you can see above, I got pretty good use out of these ones. I don't think the Salvation Army wants them as much as the trash does though.
Clearly I was in some lingonberry-induced haze when I picked up this item. It's a floor lamp, called the Jonisk. It's actually this kind of cool orb that emits a soft glow. But I've never found a place for it. I was going to donate it, but I just realized that it was $50! I've never really used it. I think I'll try Craigslist and try and build up some cash in the deikea fund!
These were given to me by a friend who purchased them at Ikea and decided later that they were more my style than hers. At the time time I wondered why, since I don't have much black in my place. Needless to say, after my ikea epiphany, I understand now. These will find a good home in the bric-a-brac section at the Salvation Army.
Pot holders. Yes. Even the pot holders... But, as you can see above, I got pretty good use out of these ones. I don't think the Salvation Army wants them as much as the trash does though.
Clearly I was in some lingonberry-induced haze when I picked up this item. It's a floor lamp, called the Jonisk. It's actually this kind of cool orb that emits a soft glow. But I've never found a place for it. I was going to donate it, but I just realized that it was $50! I've never really used it. I think I'll try Craigslist and try and build up some cash in the deikea fund!
These were given to me by a friend who purchased them at Ikea and decided later that they were more my style than hers. At the time time I wondered why, since I don't have much black in my place. Needless to say, after my ikea epiphany, I understand now. These will find a good home in the bric-a-brac section at the Salvation Army.
Friday, April 22, 2011
Small Expedit
This is my small Expedit. I have to differentiate "small," because, yes, I have a bigger one.
But more on that later.
This is a photo of it not long after I moved in. It's used as my "landing strip," something I learned about from www.apartmenttherapy.com, a wonderful resource of small-space dwellers. They also publish great books on creating a happy, healthful space. The landing strip holds keys, mail, and other things you need a place for as you enter and leave your space.
Also, if you look closely, you can see a glass bowl, also from IKEA. But I didn't buy it! It was a gift from a co-worker. No excuse, I know, I know. I'm on the look out for a wood table, possibly one that I can paint, and that has drawers, to be my future landing strip. Oh, and a cute bowl to hold my keys.
I also just noticed that the vase is from IKEA too. Geesh...
the first steps
I moved into my condo a little more than two years ago. I bought the place, using most of my cash for the down payment and closing costs.
When I moved in, I didn't have much in the way of furnishings, so I took a trip to Ikea. And then another one, and another one. I was an addict. I'd rise early on a Sunday morning, knowing the place would be empty, make the 30-minute drive south, navigate through the shortcuts I had discovered in their rat maze, and stock up on the best Swedish-designed, Chinese-made home furnishings the box store had to offer.
Any time I needed any sort of furniture, whether it was a dresser for my tee shirts in my closet or a utility shelf to hold laundry supplies, I used it as an excuse for another trip to Ikea.
I told myself that since I wasn't buying "art" or what I considered "decorations," my problem wasn't really that bad. I was just buying the basics, and then I would use my own accessories to "make it my own"!
The thing is, I knew better. I read decorating blogs, I have great design books and magazines, and could spend an entire Saturday mesmerized by HGTV. Yet I couldn't stop myself. It was so easy. And so cheap. I rationalized that since I didn't have a truck and I'm a single woman, Ikea just made sense to me. Plus, I needed a couch, and quick! And a tv stand, and floating shelves. And I might as well pick up those picture frames while I'm here...
I had a sense of accomplishment too. Sometimes I had to lug the particle board pieces one-by-one from my car up to my condo, carefully putting together the puzzle that would be my entryway table, or room divider; I "created" this! Of course I didn't. I was just replicating something that was in hundreds of thousands, maybe millions of homes worldwide.
After a while the trips slowed down. My place is less than 500 sq, so there was only so many flat packed items I could shove in there. Life went on. I needed a break from "decorating," it was time consuming and bank-account draining. Even Ikea adds up after a while.
Then last weekend it hit me. I was parked on my extorp loveseat, trying to maneuver into comfortable position, (does extorp mean 2-year-lifespan in Swedish?) glued to the aforementioned HGTV. I watched as room after room was turned into lovely, lush, textured, unique, hip spaces. I looked across my room. In my view I saw my Ikea floor lamp, tulsta chair, and the palm I bought in their gardening department, planted in an Ikea pot, of course. I wanted to barf. Suddenly I saw my condo as an Ikea catalog, just like in "Fight Club." My skin itched, I felt like I was in someone else's apartment. This wasn't my style, this was a style created by someone else that I had bought into.
I was grateful that Ikea didn't have a clothing department, otherwise my wardrobe would have consisted of Ikea-issued khakis and polos.
The more I looked, the more I found. I purchased all of this, drug it into my place and even put it together, I don't know why it was just hitting me now. I think I was in a bit of denial. Like, I knew there was a problem, but I just didn't want to face it. I that's also why I took a long hiatus from watching HGTV...I knew it would act as a wake-up call.
This isn't a major travesty; there are way more horrific things going on in the world than my little suburban condo with too much furniture from a certain store. But it's something that I want to change. I believe that your home makes a difference in your happiness. It should reflect who you are and who you want to be, and quite frankly, I don't want to be a box store.
So I went around and cataloged what I have -- about 23 items from Ikea. They range from pot holders to a c.d. tower. I want to pare this down significantly by the end of 2012, a little more than a year and a half. I'm hesitant to give a number, because I think the more I change out, the less the remaining stuff will bother me. I'm giving myself that long because I know it's not going to be that easy, monetarily or labor-wise.
One last note: this isn't a diatribe on Ikea, just an expose on my lazy design skills. Clearly, their products served a purpose in my life, but for me, it's time to move on.
Stay tuned as I attempt to deikea my life, piece by piece.
When I moved in, I didn't have much in the way of furnishings, so I took a trip to Ikea. And then another one, and another one. I was an addict. I'd rise early on a Sunday morning, knowing the place would be empty, make the 30-minute drive south, navigate through the shortcuts I had discovered in their rat maze, and stock up on the best Swedish-designed, Chinese-made home furnishings the box store had to offer.
Any time I needed any sort of furniture, whether it was a dresser for my tee shirts in my closet or a utility shelf to hold laundry supplies, I used it as an excuse for another trip to Ikea.
I told myself that since I wasn't buying "art" or what I considered "decorations," my problem wasn't really that bad. I was just buying the basics, and then I would use my own accessories to "make it my own"!
The thing is, I knew better. I read decorating blogs, I have great design books and magazines, and could spend an entire Saturday mesmerized by HGTV. Yet I couldn't stop myself. It was so easy. And so cheap. I rationalized that since I didn't have a truck and I'm a single woman, Ikea just made sense to me. Plus, I needed a couch, and quick! And a tv stand, and floating shelves. And I might as well pick up those picture frames while I'm here...
I had a sense of accomplishment too. Sometimes I had to lug the particle board pieces one-by-one from my car up to my condo, carefully putting together the puzzle that would be my entryway table, or room divider; I "created" this! Of course I didn't. I was just replicating something that was in hundreds of thousands, maybe millions of homes worldwide.
After a while the trips slowed down. My place is less than 500 sq, so there was only so many flat packed items I could shove in there. Life went on. I needed a break from "decorating," it was time consuming and bank-account draining. Even Ikea adds up after a while.
Then last weekend it hit me. I was parked on my extorp loveseat, trying to maneuver into comfortable position, (does extorp mean 2-year-lifespan in Swedish?) glued to the aforementioned HGTV. I watched as room after room was turned into lovely, lush, textured, unique, hip spaces. I looked across my room. In my view I saw my Ikea floor lamp, tulsta chair, and the palm I bought in their gardening department, planted in an Ikea pot, of course. I wanted to barf. Suddenly I saw my condo as an Ikea catalog, just like in "Fight Club." My skin itched, I felt like I was in someone else's apartment. This wasn't my style, this was a style created by someone else that I had bought into.
I was grateful that Ikea didn't have a clothing department, otherwise my wardrobe would have consisted of Ikea-issued khakis and polos.
The more I looked, the more I found. I purchased all of this, drug it into my place and even put it together, I don't know why it was just hitting me now. I think I was in a bit of denial. Like, I knew there was a problem, but I just didn't want to face it. I that's also why I took a long hiatus from watching HGTV...I knew it would act as a wake-up call.
This isn't a major travesty; there are way more horrific things going on in the world than my little suburban condo with too much furniture from a certain store. But it's something that I want to change. I believe that your home makes a difference in your happiness. It should reflect who you are and who you want to be, and quite frankly, I don't want to be a box store.
So I went around and cataloged what I have -- about 23 items from Ikea. They range from pot holders to a c.d. tower. I want to pare this down significantly by the end of 2012, a little more than a year and a half. I'm hesitant to give a number, because I think the more I change out, the less the remaining stuff will bother me. I'm giving myself that long because I know it's not going to be that easy, monetarily or labor-wise.
One last note: this isn't a diatribe on Ikea, just an expose on my lazy design skills. Clearly, their products served a purpose in my life, but for me, it's time to move on.
Stay tuned as I attempt to deikea my life, piece by piece.
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