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The Grove Unfinished Furniture

01-25-grove.jpg Hardwood furniture is not always affordable. However, some of the pieces at The Grove offer a glimmer of hope! They have a slew of unfinished, simple, hardwood furniture. Though traditional in style, many of these pieces could find a place in a modern home. And since they're unfinished, the end look of each piece is really up to you.

A few of our favorite values at The Grove are after the jump:

 
 
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Tall 2-Piece Bookcase, $240
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Widescreen TV Console , $350
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Oak Colonial Spindleback Chair, $160

Bonus: Most items we looked at have free shipping.

Tags

diningroom, bedroom, country house

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Comments (3)

That bookcase is very pretty, but is pine a good wood for a bookcase? Isn't it likely to bend? Granted, that bookcase is a great price, so it's nearly in the "disposable" range.

posted by But it's pine? on 2007-01-25 13:54:55

All of my bookcases are pine and I've had no problems. Though I don't think it gets as humid here as in some parts of the country. It seems that how the wood it cut might be more imporant than the kind of wood, but I might be making that up.

posted by charlene on 2007-01-25 23:31:20

Nice pieces. I like the console. In my experience, unfinished pieces can become in the end expensive. If you want to finish and have a professional look, whether staining and polycoating (or varnish) or painting, the final finish will determine the lasting quality of the piece.

That console will not bend from a nice flat screen, etc. Usually these pieces are made to be strong and this company is excellent. I believe their joints are strong and durable. But unless you want to put in tons of elbow grease to achieve the finish that will make a difference, the cost begins to rise. For a few dollars more you can buy a good looking finished piece - ok, a few dollars more but then you don't have the labor.

Between stain, the proper final finish (and an oil based poly would be a good choice) and your work time - not to mention the sanding - you taking on a hefty project.

If you just want to slap some paint on it, then fine, but to add lasting beauty, well, then you need to do some work.

Just my opinion.

posted by Jackie (the original one) on 2007-01-25 23:49:00

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