Thursday, March 11th 2010

Services and area cover Options Fitted Furniture supplies and installs made to measure, bespoke fitted furniture for bedrooms, home offices, studies, home cinemas, alcoves and living rooms throughout the south east of England including the home counties of Surrey, East Sussex, West Sussex, Kent, Essex, Hertfordshire (Herts), Buckinghamshire (Bucks), Bedfordshire, (Beds), Middlesex Hampshire and Greater London including south London, south west (SW) London, east London, north London, north west (NW) London, west London and central London. Also, by appointment Dorset, Wiltshire (Wilts), Warwickshire, Suffolk, Oxfordshire (Oxon) and Cambridgeshire (Cambs)

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How to avoid mould in fitted bedroom furniture

Bedroom No Comments »

This is a topic on which I have touched before but it is one that continues to crop up when talking to clients about fitted bedrooms, so I thought it might be helpful to go into more detail.

I am often told that clients have experienced problems on opening fitted wardrobe doors, and particularly when picking out seasonal clothes such as ski wear or last year’s summer clothes that have been in the cupboard for perhaps 6 to 11 months since their last wearing, and finding that the clothes have mould stains that can be difficult, or even impossible, to clean.

It is often assumed that this is the result of penetrating or rising damp, and it might be where the bedroom is on the ground floor or the property is pre 1930s and does not have a cavity wall.  However, with the majority of bedrooms being at first floor level or higher and most houses, going back to the 19th century, being of cavity wall construction, the cause probably lies elsewhere.

If any part of a fitted wardrobe, even one end, is on an external wall or a chimney breast the internal surface of that wall is likely to be colder than the ambient temperature in the room, particularly in a centrally heated house in winter.

The warm air in our houses absorbs moisture from our persperation, exhalation and cooking.  We open a wardrobe door, perhaps only once in the morning and once in the evening and moist warm air displaces the still, drier, cooler air within. We go off to work or go to bed and as the outside surfaces of our home cool, heat is drawn outwards from the inner walls, cooling the surfaces and the air trapped within the furniture which gives up its humidity and precipitates some moisture onto the inner surfaces of the wardrobe and onto the clothes stored there. The next time we open the cupboard doors the interior warms up and we have created the perfect moist, dark environment for a small mushroom farm.

The solution? If you are getting quotations for bespoke fitted bedroom furniture from companies like Options Fitted Furniture insist that the wardrobes are fully carcassed, that is; completely sealed, with solid (ideally 18mm) backs to the carcasses and that there is still air space of at least 30mm between the backs and the walls.  It may cost a little more than what is usually refered to as front-frame bedroom furniture but it will smell a whole lot nicer and your precious clothes will be safe.

How to work from home without going totally barking

Uncategorized 2 Comments »

It is over 10 years since I last had a ‘proper job’; you know, one where you get up at the same time everyday, travel from home to a place of work, finish at a given time and return to private life in the evening.

10 years ago, I took a break from a lifetime of working in the furniture industry to provide marketing services to house-builders, you must remember them. I fitted myself out with a home office in the loft and spent most of my time mailing and telephoning small companies to offer an ‘out-sourced marketing department’, with reasonable success, particularly with the aforesaid house-builders.

About five years ago I was asked by Options Furniture to take on the role of marketing manager, on a consultancy basis, and as the house-builder market has faded away, most of my time is now spent marketing bespoke fitted furniture from my home office.

So, how do you adjust to a life where you do not have to have a rigid daily timetable and no longer need to commute to the office, which is 30 seconds from my bedroom?

With the growth in home working, I now have several friends who run ‘cottage’ based businesses. One, a life coach, rises at 0.700, has breakfast, sees the kids off to school and college and then ‘walks to work’; round the block and back into his own front door.  I am not sure whether or not he walks home in the evening. We also hold a ‘virtual office Christmas party’ every year at a local restaurant from which our friends with proper jobs are excluded.

Two others, a wine importer and a surveyor meet regularly over coffee at a local café for some ‘water-cooler’ chat. One of them takes an afternoon power nap and that is one privilege of home working that I relish.

Me? I make sure that I have some time structured morning activities like breakfast Rotary and BNI to keep me in the habit of getting up and to provide some fellowship and camaraderie. I meet up with a bunch of guys at a different pub once every month for some proper man time and I do some volunteering for charity.

Otherwise, my working day is a bit solitary but compensated for by a comfortable working environment provided by beautiful, bespoke fitted home office furniture bought from Options Fitted Furniture.   Yes, I do get a discount!

Does anybody have other strategies?
Jun 09

Swings and roundabouts

Uncategorized No Comments »

Of course the market for fitted wardrobes and home office furniture is a bit flat right now.  A lot of the market for bespoke fitted furniture is housing related and with the sharp downturn in property sales all furniture retailers are seeing reduced demand.  That fact added to flat retail spending on big ticket items generally isn’t helping.

However, we have seen some interesting activity at the top end of the market with an order to furnish a grand 16th century manor house that is 20 times our average order vale; 20 fitted bedrooms on one day would be a sizeable contribution to our monthly turnover at any time but doubly welcome in the current market.

We have also ventured into some new market areas for bespoke cabinetry that are not just domestic clients and although commercial fit outs may be a fewer than in the boom years, another single order has proved almost equal to a month’s sales in retail fitted furniture.

A blast from the past

Lounge No Comments »

It is always good to be asked to make some new furniture for an old customer and to get the opportunity to see how a bespoke piece of fitted furniture I designed a few years ago is looking.

However it’s a real treat when the last installation was 16 years ago.

Styles have moved on since then but it was good to see that this faux limed oak fitted wall unit looked as good as on the day it was installed.

limed-oak-mfc-wall-unit.jpg