This article made me wonder why the market for heirloom and secondhand furniture has shrunk over the years despite the easy access to the Internet to find the buyers.
I feel like partially because usually the buyers for secondhand furniture are younger people looking to furnish home and the younger generation has different ideas of home now- people do not have the same "ideal American house". "Ideal house" isn't all about huge living room and multiple bathrooms filled with bulky furniture. People don't have as many kids and don't need house that big.
Also, the average age for marriage has gone up. "The average age of first marriage in the United States is 27 for women and 29 for men, up from 23 for women and 26 for men in 1990 and 20 and 22 in 1960."(http://www.theatlantic.com/sexes/archive/2013/03/getting-married-later-is-great-for-college-educated-women/274040/) I am not entirely sure if this has direct correlation to the issue but I think maybe as people are getting married when they are older and more stable, they are willing to spend more money on new furniture that they can declare their own than buying something secondhand to save money.
It is also possible that the younger generation doesn't like to settle as the older generation did and they are not willing to take in a big piece of furniture that would be hard to dispose if they were to move. Time talks about this generation in this article : http://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1018089,00.html
Here's the article.
Original article link :
http://online.wsj.com/articles/why-the-market-for-heirloom-and-secondhand-furniture-has-disappeared-1404256129
Why the Market for Heirloom and Secondhand Furniture Has Disappeared
Upholstered sofas, hutches, formal dining sets, wood-finished dressers, pianos—all have become almost impossible to sell or even give away
Updated July 1, 2014 7:19 p.m. ET
As people look to de-clutter their homes, it's harder
than ever to get rid of used furniture and other bulky things. Alina
Dizik joins Lunch Break with Tanya Rivero what options are out there
besides Craigslist and the curb. Photo: iStock
After his son went off to college in
August, Craig Norberg-Bohm was ready to downsize. In less than two
weeks, he sold his five-bedroom home and bought a three-bedroom. But
almost a year later, he is still trying to get rid of his extra
furniture.
Friends have been through to
cherry-pick the contents of the 62-year-old's Arlington, Mass., home. He
put shelves, a childhood dresser and other furniture in storage. Now,
with his moving date approaching fast, he is still looking for a home
for four bookshelves, two bedroom sets, two desks and a dining room set.
"Nobody wants a pingpong table," says Mr. Norberg-Bohm, a community educator for a Boston nonprofit.
Whether
moving to a smaller abode or simply cleaning out, many people are
making an unwelcome discovery: Their prized family heirlooms have turned
into junk. Upholstered sofas, formal dining tables and hutches,
Victorian-style mahogany and oak furniture, entertainment units, bulky
television sets, pianos—all have become almost impossible to sell or, in
some cases, give away.
Janet Sharp Kershaw, hoping to move from her Winchester,
Mass., home to an apartment, has spent two years paring down antiques,
china and outdoor accessories.
Dominick Reuter for The Wall Street Journal
The furnishings industry has a name
for the big, dated wood-finished and upholstered pieces that no one
wants anymore—"brown furniture." Stockpiles of "brown leather and brown
Ultrasuede couches have nowhere to go," says Jeffrey Brooks, a Long
Valley, N.J., interior designer.
What happened to the market for secondhand furniture?
Those consumers are shopping at Ikea, Wal-Mart and Target, says
Jerry Epperson,
a partner at Mann, Armistead and Epperson, a Richmond, Va.,
investment bank specializing in the home-furnishings sector. The cost of
furniture, in constant dollars, has fallen on average about 50% over
the past 30 years, he says, the result of the availability of cheaper
imports.
Even the Salvation Army, known
for making furniture pickups, has become pickier in recent years, says
Major Greg Davis, a general secretary at the nonprofit. Delivery-truck
drivers began carrying Internet-enabled tablets about two years ago.
When in doubt, they take a quick photo of a piece and send it ahead to
the local store to make sure it will be accepted. Many shelving units
are turned away, he says, as are pianos and badly torn or stained
upholstered furniture. Still, the volume of furniture delivered at
Salvation Army centers is growing by about 4% a year, Major Davis says.
When
locating from full-size suburban houses to townhomes, many people
realize too late that their old furniture will be an awkward fit, says
Mr. Brooks, the interior designer. Design elements in new construction,
including kitchen islands, built-in shelves and the lack of formal
dining rooms help make older furniture feel dated. The sizes are all
wrong, he says. "Everything had been scaled for bigger spaces."
Many homeowners moving to smaller abodes with new
dimensions and built-in features find they have no use for prized
pieces—including, clockwise from upper left, home-workout equipment,
dining room sets, armoires, pianos, media and home-entertainment units
and wood-finished dressers—and neither does anyone else..
Getty Images (6)
For homeowners in a rush, Kate
Grondin, who owns Home Transition Resource, of Andover, Mass., has a
procedure. First, she advises homeowners to use email and social media
to put out the word to friends and family that they have stuff they want
to sell or give away. Then, she invites in antiques dealers to pick
through the most valuable items. Next she brings in local
consignment-store owners to assess other salable items, such as
mid-century and industrial-style furniture, Oriental rugs, informal
kitchen tables, art, side tables and yard equipment.
After
that, she tries to donate items to local nonprofits. Finally, she posts
pieces on Craigslist, offering them at no charge—as long as the taker
comes to get them.
While clients may
get anywhere from several hundred to several thousand dollars for their
belongings, the cash isn't the most important thing, she says. "Just
having it gone is worth a lot," says Ms. Grondin who charges hourly and
often gets $3,000 to $4,000 for the average home. She often warns
clients to expect their children to have little-to-no interest in the
stuff.
Janet Sharp Kershaw, 55, has
spent two years downsizing in hopes of moving from her three-bedroom
Winchester, Mass., home to an apartment in Boston or New York this year.
"It was very tedious," she says. At one point, she dialed a
junk-removal service, and two delivery men helped her fill a dumpster
with unwanted items. They charged $800.
Looking
back, she says she regrets throwing away several decorative doors and
three rugs. "It made me feel terrible," she says. "I should have been
able to give them away to someone who needs them." Since then, she has
learned about Freecycle.org, where users unload unwanted things to
others at no charge.
Three months ago, Ms. Grondin helped
Ms. Sharp Kershaw contact specialty dealers to pare down her collections
of china and silver, antique furniture, artwork and outdoor
accessories. She sold an antique dining hutch purchased 15 years ago for
$5,000 to an antiques dealer for $3,500. A local secondhand furniture
shop gave her $500 for a bulky horizontal dresser she bought 10 years
ago for $2,500. After two months of trying to sell an antique sleigh bed
she bought five years ago for $3,000, she gave it away to a nonprofit.
Maureen
Spriggs cleared out a 20-year stockpile of furniture from her Wilmette,
Ill., home. It saved time to hire a third party for the sorting.
Otherwise, she says, the tendency would have been to "build a three-act
play" around each item. The company she hired was an "eco-cleanout"
specialist, meaning they sell or recycle but don't throw things away.
Ms.
Spriggs agreed to donate holiday decorations to a nonprofit. "You can't
imagine how wonderful it is that I don't have 87 pieces of Christmas
decorations stuffing up my garage," she says. She gave a rarely used
sage-green sleeper sofa, Prairie-style end tables, an ottoman and two
lamps to her administrative assistant at the real-estate office where
she works. The co-worker sent her a photo of her new living-room setup
and a handwritten thank-you note.
An
efficient secondhand-furniture market would actually help new-furniture
sales, some retailers say. Doug Wolf, co-owner of Wolf Furniture in
Altoona, Penn., started Allegheny Consignment, a consignment-shop chain
where shoppers are encouraged to consign old pieces after purchasing new
ones at Wolf. "We get two sales from the same customer," says Mr. Wolf.
He has two Allegheny stores open and plans for a third in fall.
Allegheny gets 50% of the secondhand sales. Consignors earn an average
of $200 per sale, he says.
Ms. Sharp Kershaw arranges her patio furniture as she
prepares her home for an open-house as it goes on the market.
Dominick Reuter for The Wall Street Journal
- Juwon
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