The other nite, woozy from way too much sake, we crashed at a friend's house. Of course, when we woke up in the morning, we did one of those things only a dedicated AT blogger can do. We asked about the pillows. Silky, gusseted, extra long, firm but not hard, we were pretty sure they were one of those pricey pillows bought at a high end store (this particular friend has a knack for stepping into a store just as the sale signs go up). We did not expect the answer to be Ikea.










I love my Ikea pillow & am happy I wasn't afraid to buy it!
view TannerAdair's profile
I just bought a Ikea pillow about 2 months ago and I love it! It's a memory foam one for back sleepers and it's just as good as my $100 Tempurpedic pillow which my boyfriend stole for himself.
view Monica's profile
Don't go low-end with Ikea pillows though.. I bought a couple of cheap ones a few months ago and they now feel like they are filled with balled up socks.
view wlynn's profile
"And, the feathers and down are never taken from living birds."
what a strange way to word that.
Don't get me wrong - I eat meat, wear leather, own down comforters, etc.
But when I found out that down came from dead birds... (before I worked at Pacific Coast Feather, I hadn't really thought about it). I am glad that the feathers come from countries where people actually eat the fowl too.
Now, why vegan people are anti-wool, I don't understand.
You shear the sheep, and their wool grows back.
I do want to check out those pillows though!
view apdesigngirl's profile
My Ikea pillows are now dedicated to the guests. Not the most comfortable pillow.
view right angle's profile
I love my IKEA memory foam pillow...cheaper and 500% better than the one I got at WalMart.
view thursday's profile
i have to say that my $150 ikea hogbo mattress has been the mooost comfortable one i can remember. my mom even loves it - it'll be the guest bed when she visits! so i would try their pillows any day.
apdesigngirl - i would say that one reason might be the way in which many sheep are sheared in large commercial wool production, i have read that it can be painful and bloody if they are sheared too close and many other problems such as pretty bad disease and parasite issues. not a vegan here, just a knitter! and i do use wool products. but i guess the wool industry is a lot like any other animal product industry, unfortunately.
whoops, didn't mean to write such a long off-topic comment, sorry!
view akostalas's profile
apdesigngirl:
the shearing often cuts and wounds the animals. they don't all do it with the tenderness of the farmer in Babe.
AND their living conditions aren't so wonderful, either.
view indiasoup's profile
$100 for a pillow is still kinda steep...I'd get one if it went on sale for sure...
view evamae's profile
"We're a side sleeper..."
The royal "WE" has GOT TO STOP!!! it is so awkward to read and masks the actual content in every AT post. Everyone in agreement say I. "I."
Thank you. Meeting adjourned.
view sarahjam's profile
though not as vehemently, i must say
"i"
!
view pinko's profile
Aye. "We're a side sleeper"? Come on. That's just awkward writing.
view Kate The Great's profile
To apdesigngirl:
The difference between shearing a sheep roughly - and man, have I been on that end! It's ugly! - and taking feathers from live birds is night and day. Feathers often go straight into veins, and unlike shearing - which just clips off surface keratin - pulled feathers can result in the bird bleeding out. It's best to kill the bird first, then sear/boil, then pluck the results than boil the critter alive for its clothing.
Shearing sure can be ugly, but feathers from living birds is downright cruel.
.... er, great site, really love the articles.
view pretentiousgit's profile
magazines always write in "we" unless specifying "this reporter."
view Lady J's profile
I am also over the royal we. I love you AT, but come ooooon. Perez Hilton writes in the royal we. You don't need to, unless you mean AT editors on the whole.
And how much are these pillows? I think evamae misinterpreted the $100 thing, but I'd like to know how much Ikea charges.
view Shannon in SF's profile
My Ikea pillows started out great and soon were quite flat. I now use the Martha Stewart Everyday ones from KMart - awesome, and when they're on sale they're about 8 bucks.
view MargaretR's profile
Also, not exactly related, but the reason vegans I know don't want to use wool (or silk) is because they believe animals don't exist as a commodity for humans, so they need to keep their wool, etc. to themselves.
view MargaretR's profile
I can get a much better price on comparable pillows at TJ Maxx, Costco, and a couple of other places. Who pays 100 for a pillow? These aren't family heirlooms.
GOSA NÄVA/KÄRNA Pillow, back sleeper $99.99
GOSA NÄVA/KÄRNA Pillow, side sleeper $79.99
view Palmetto's profile
My square Ikea couch pillows are the softest I've ever found--and the inserts were really cheap (probably under $10 each).
Now, to add to the great grammar debate:
"We're side sleepers" (if in fact there are two of us)
"I'm a side sleeper" or "this writer is a side sleeper" (if it's just me)
This is not difficult, people--but on the other hand, this is a nation where everyone now says, "I'm doing good!" or "She did really good on that project!" instead of using "well," which has basically disappeared from our language. Grrrr....
view madsarah's profile
*just I :)
view madsarah's profile
The we annoys me. "We had a neighbor growing up blah blah..." it drives me crazy. I feel like an idiot because for a while I was wondering if the writer just lives with his/her sibling.
In this post it's easy to ignore until the "we're a side sleeper." That's just wrong unless the "we" in question are siamese twins... presuming they share the same side.
view -haley-'s profile
Oh, and I'm really excited about Ikea pillows, btw!!!!
view -haley-'s profile
thank you everyone, for voluntarily participating in our meeting and shouting I!!!!!
Now if only the individual authors (so as to step away from their collectiveness) would step up to the podium and explain themselves to their bewildered, beloved audience....
view sarahjam's profile
I agree, the use of the "editorial we" is so silly on this site. Because the posts are credited to individual bloggers, and when their content is so often very personal rather than stating a collective opinion, it's totally awkward.
Mark Twain said it best: "Only kings, presidents, editors, and people with tapeworms have the right to use the editorial 'we'."
view midmogirl's profile
I just wanted to add that regular foam and memory foam outgas like crazy. Please be informed before sleeping 8hrs a night, every night, on these.
Here's my post on that topic:
http://canuckoutofwater.blogspot.com/2007/12/formaldehyde-yum.html
And my source (one of many):
http://www.chem-tox.com/guest/guestbook.html
Though all products come with life cycle pros and cons, here are a few alternatives that are readily available at a variety of price points: feather, down, wool, corn fibre, polyester fibre, bamboo fibre, latex and kapok. Most are treated in one way or another so label-reading is good here too if you're sensitive or allergic.
Happy slumber!
view dianejwright's profile
I really like my canopy living pillows from walmart, of all places.
There are too many grammar nazis on this site...
view baltimorerowhouse's profile
Of course, as with many things loved by white people, simple often means expensive and these haircuts usually cost upwards of $100.
Being a truly advanced white person means being able to speak with authority about pretty much any field of conversation- especially politics. In order for white people to streamline the process of knowing everything, all human beings can be neatly filed into one of two categories: People I Agree With, and People Who are Just Like Adolf Hitler.
It is the duty of every white person to correct typos. It is worth the risk of banishment to deliver proper grammar to those who need it.
Straight from: stuffwhitepeoplelike.com
view Djluckyonline's profile