How the heck do you choose a sofa?

ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
Mrs Feet, Little Miss Feet and I have finally moved into our new house, and we have need of a new sofa. What I find, when looking online, is that even after excluding the ugly and the obviously unsuitable (spindly legs, no back support to speak of, made entirely of foam) there is still a bewildering array of styles and price points such that we have no damned clue what's good, what's bad, what's overpriced and what's cheap for a reason, and what's an outright scam. Short of visiting a physical shop and bouncing up and down on a specific sofa and loading it into a van there and then how does anyone figure out choosing a sofa?

Every time we've acquired one in the past it's been a used, £0-50, bring your own van situation.

Comments

  • Hmm.
    Leather(care) or not.
    Height/angle of back rest.
    Seating cushions fixed or removable.
    Arm supports rounded or flat for supporting plates/cups/phones/books.
    Height from floor affects how you vacuum.

    Colour coordination (I defer to LKKspouse)

    PS. I have no real expertise in this.
  • DoublethinkDoublethink Admin, 8th Day Host
    edited December 22
    Measure the space you have, it can help use wallpaper to make a 2d shape of the sofa floorplan - then you can make sure it will fit in the space with enough gap to pass etc.

    Think about the other colours in the room and try to choose something that goes or picks out a colour from a pattern / picture there.

    Also, lengthwise, think about if you would like to be able to lie full length on it.
  • A rule of thumb is that the uglier it is, the more comfortable it is. I am not sure why, but it seems to be true.
  • Not only does it have to fit in the available space but the size/dimensions have to be such that it can get to the available space, especially if there are corners to go round in the voyage.

    Douglas Adams had a very amusing take on this in one of the Dirk Gently books.
  • NenyaNenya All Saints Host, Ecclesiantics & MW Host
    A rule of thumb is that the uglier it is, the more comfortable it is. I am not sure why, but it seems to be true.

    True in our experience. Our current sofa is huge, leather, and a sickly yellow colour. I've never liked it but we bought it cheap years ago from someone we knew, when we had small pets that chewed things. My husband, who suffers with his back, hotly defends it as he finds it so comfortable and I have to admit that it is indeed far more comfortable than those at our daughter's house - new, more compact and in a tasteful grey material but even I find them impossible to be comfortable on.
  • North East QuineNorth East Quine Purgatory Host
    We have made it into our sixties without ever having chosen a sofa. Our first was a hand-me-down from my parents; then we replaced it with my late grandfather's one when he died, and then my parents upgraded again, and so we got their old one.

    I think we would be as bewildered as you if we had to choose one.
  • Bishops FingerBishops Finger Shipmate
    edited December 22
    I have a small, two-seater, sofa in the saloon of the Ark. It has removable cushions, and is covered in light green Dralon (sp?) - so that dates it! It's comfortable enough, but not long enough for me to lie down on it.

    I'd like to replace it, preferably with a Comfy Chair (as in The Spanish Inquisition sketch), but getting it out of the Ark, and getting the Comfy Chair in, would be a major undertaking.

    The prime consideration for @Arethosemyfeet ISTM is the size of the new sofa, and the space available. I acknowledge that going to a shop, and trying out various options, is difficult, but in the long run, it might be the only satisfactory solution.
  • we choose an old floor model that would otherwise have been way out of our budget, and it has been lovely except that you'd have to have legs a mile long to be able to rest your feet on the floor and your back against the cushions, the way most people do. On the other hand, the extra width makes it ideal for a bed to recover from surgery.
  • Short of visiting a physical shop and bouncing up and down on a specific sofa and loading it into a van there and then how does anyone figure out choosing a sofa?

    I would prefer not to choose a sofa without visiting a showroom and bouncing up and down on it. Generally, one doesn't load the specific sofa in to a van and leave: one decides that this model is the right one, and arranges for the store to deliver a new one.

    (Although our current sofa is the floor model of a sectional from Costco, so we did load the thing in to the back of a truck there and then.)

    The first sofa Mrs C and I ever owned was a cheap two-seater that was almost free from a shop that was closing down. We walked about two miles or so carrying that sofa home to our tiny rented flat. Fortunately, every time we got a bit tired, we had a convenient seat to sit on.
  • Jane RJane R Shipmate
    I would hate to have to choose a sofa without actually trying it out in the shop, but if you can't easily get to a shop, try measuring a sofa that you find comfortable - height of seat from ground, depth of seat, height of backrest. And what The Rogue said about making sure you can get the sofa into the house when it arrives: our newest sofa (only five years old) had to be brought in via the back door with its feet removed...
  • I would only buy a sofa if I could try it out in a showroom first. Although I did buy a bed online, it was fine.
  • BoogieBoogie Heaven Host
    edited December 22
    We chose our new sofa online a couple of years ago, went to the shop and hated it! Luckily they had others and I'm sitting on one as we speak. Very comfortable. Leather - I prefer leather as it's cool in the summer, cosy in the winter and easy to clean.
  • I think buying a sofa is a bit like buying a car, the type needed by a young couple or a family is potentially not the same as that for an elderly person, who might want a recliner or a lift chair to assist rising. If no special considerations are needed, then I think room size, and layout, budget and colour/material preferences are criteria to consider. If a brand new sofa is not required or difficult to find, sometimes auction houses or online marketplaces can be a source, but these need to be checked carefully and definitely sit on them as the seats on our family room sofa are a bit to deep for my short legs. Fortunately the back support can be moved forward which has helped.

    We bought a new pleather sofa when we moved to our house 8 years ago for the casual living area. After 3 years of constant use, it was had it and not worth getting recovered. We weighed up the options between another cheapie or spending a fair chunk of cash to buy one that had a metal frame and very sturdy leather (we had been caught previously with a lovely soft thin leather not standing up to wear and tear).. We are 3 years in on the exy one, which we bought on sale and it is going well, other than a couple of cat scratches which are not too noticeable. In the good room I bought a 3 piece cream fabric suite with wooden arms and cane backs and sides for under aud100 because I bought it in January from the local auction house when everyone was on holidays and not following the auctions. We rarely have small children visit so the colour has not been a problem. When the kids were little I would not have purchased it.

    So we have 2 totally different looks for the lounges, a brown one in the family room which light brown ceramic tiles but it's not dingy because the room has full length windows. In the good room we have a very traditional, almost antique look, and when I have friends over we sit there for cups of tea and chat.

    I love that many major firms have websites, so some preliminary research can be done re pricing, sales and narrowing down to a top 3 or 4 and then an in person visit to decide which is the most comfortable and suitable for needs. Good luck @Arethosemyfeet, I hope you can find something that you are happy with.
  • Jane RJane R Shipmate
    We always go for fabric. I don't like the feel of leather sofas, and the dog would probably slide off them.
  • We don't have a dog, but we still prefer fabric.
  • Also, moving to make yourself comfortable on a fabric sofa doesn't generate a sound like a fart.
  • That makes me remember a scene in an airport lounge from the M. Hulot film "Trafic".
  • :lol:

    My brother-in-law (who is Slovenian, but lives in France) is a present-day personification of M Hulot...the height, the stoop, the walk, etc. etc....
    :lol:
  • @Arethosemyfeet Congratulations on moving into your new dwelling. Don't have any new suggestions for purchasing a sofa. We have bought several over the years. We have always gotten ones that are long enough to use as a sleeper in case of an emergency. Spent several weeks on the last one after I broke my foot and was pretty much immobilized for a few weeks.
  • PuzzlerPuzzler Shipmate
    Mine is a sofa-bed, so it can be pulled out for overnight guests. It has not been used by guests for at least 15 years. It is not very comfortable to sit on for people with short legs as the seat is too deep. I never use it myself.
    If I were going to replace it I would go to an out-of-town store to try them out, good quality but very pricey. Then look in the ‘ returns’ section for a bargain. Worth paying for delivery, especially if they will also remove the old one.
  • If you're getting a used one, you do of course want to check for bedbugs.
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