HIGH ON MY LIST of things to accomplish this winter, somewhere between “Buy house” and “Update password list” (now 8 typewritten pages long), was “New clothing storage for bedroom.” I had already winnowed as much as I dared, but my four-drawer dresser and single not-so-big closet were not cutting it. If I bought so much as one new sweater, I’d be in wardrobe overflow.
The bedroom in my ground-floor brownstone apartment has a big ol’ hunk of orange wall 75″ across, where once a fireplace stood. Quite a few inches on either side of my midsize dresser were going to waste. There was also the possibility of going up the wall, with some kind of highboy or armoire.
I began my shopping online, considering mid-century ‘bachelor’s chests’ of the type included in bedroom suites of the 1950s and ’60s. They run $600-800, which is about what I planned to spend, but they were dark, stolid, and masculine-looking. I wanted something lighter. With my limited budget, I was looking for a piece of secondhand furniture, so I had no idea what, exactly, I was going to find (that’s the whole fun of it, actually).
My Internet explorations led me to a company I hadn’t heard of, Furnish Green, whose website shows a wide-ranging mix of styles from rustic and cottage-y to industrial and Danish modern. Its site is well-organized and easy to search, but even better was visiting their midtown Manhattan showroom to view their offerings in three dimensions, which I did today. Furnish Green is a find, yet another of those hidden treasures New York offers up when you least expect it.
And where you least expect it. Its showrooms are a few unconnected office spaces on the fifth floor of a garment-center building near Herald Square. One is shared with a ballroom dance studio; another is used for furniture refinishing and for the photography crucial to their online sales (Furnish Green has a big Craigslist presence). That’s Jeffrey, below, one of three employees, in the workroom. The owner, Nathan, is also the owner of the ballroom dance studio.
The main showroom is a bright corner space tightly packed with moderately-priced pieces that are neither precious nor pedigreed, yet most have something quirky or interesting about them.
Furnish Green gets 10-12 new pieces every day. “We do something to almost every one of them,” I was told — not necessarily full-on refinishing or re-upholstering, but steam-cleaning, oiling and polishing, and often, painting, to turn a dull brown piece of American borax (an old term for furnishings mass-manufactured in Grand Rapids, Mich.) into something more closely resembling Shabby Chic.
I came, I saw, I bought (see below). And yes, they deliver.






7 comments
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January 25, 2013 at 10:43 pm
GAP
Too much. Now living here full time, I realized I was seriously short of storage space for my clothes and decided to do something about it this week. I went ebay and bought a beautiful oak dresser to add counterpoint to all the modern; was delivered yesterday. Five more much-needed drawers. Mission accomplished, I moved on to searching ebay for another end table for the living room and a piece for another open space that could provide more storage for various and sundry. I hear several pieces on this website calling to me. Had no idea this place existed. Thanks for sharing.
January 26, 2013 at 8:37 am
vinalew
thanks for this. Now that floors will soon be installed, I will have to stage/ furnish office , den with smaller pieces that I can move with. I will check this out.
January 26, 2013 at 9:03 am
cara
Is that a pun, GAP? Oak dresser = Mission accomplished.
January 26, 2013 at 3:53 pm
GAP
Not a “mission” oak piece, but good catch–as is your find at this place. What a stunning piece, and more than ample storage.
January 27, 2013 at 1:44 pm
coppermaven
Cara you always find the gems! Can’t wait to see the new piece!
January 28, 2013 at 8:24 am
Julie Kinnear
in the world of second hand furniture demand for good pieces is higher than the actual offer. Those are some really good pieces. I wish I could visit this store. I wouldn’t leave empty-handed for sure.
January 28, 2013 at 11:36 am
Cher Vick
Never heard of this place either, I will check it out! Although, there is a furniture/flea market near Little Italy/Fordham University in the Bronx that you can get like $50 pieces. That is a little unknown gem.