Thursday, February 25, 2010

House room

It's seven years, now, since I sold my last owned house in England. (It feels less. I still think of it as home, sometimes, even though I hadn't lived there for two years before that.)

It's six months since we moved into our first owned house in New Zealand. We've replaced the windows with good double-glazing, restored the garage to its proper use (rather than the half-assed workshop space so beloved of Kiwi males), and furnished it with some of our own things, but largely with stuff looted from the in-laws. The king-sized guest bed, the dining table and chairs, several other chairs, the sofa - all donated by Susan's side of the family.

Also about six months ago my parents, fed up with storing such of my possessions as I hadn't brought over yet, crated them up and shipped them over here. They took a while to arrive - I think they might have come via Somalia, among other places - but come they did, eventually. Then they had to wait for me to get off my backside and chivvy them through customs and biosecurity. I finally got the boxes home and unpacked last month.

The first thing I noticed, in unpacking - no, make that the third thing - was that quite a lot of this stuff wasn't mine. (The first thing was that the packages were held together with enough parcel tape to secure a small moon launch. The second was that they contained enough scrunched-up newspaper to constitute almost an entire edition of the Sunday Times. No wonder they weighed so much.) As in, I'd either never laid eyes on it before, or I had but I knew damn' well it belonged to someone else. Clearly, my parents had decided to retaliate by making me store some of their stuff. (We now have a Czechoslovakian-made 12-setting tea set, which is vaguely familiar but quite definitely Not Mine. I'm mildly curious to learn where I've seen it before.) And there's a medium-sized pile of books that my father may have thought I'd enjoy, and maybe I will, but he can't possibly have imagined were mine...

It's amazing how much you can fit into your cupboards, once you start exploring their innermost recesses and apply what you learned from Tetris. But cupboards thus filled are not - comfortable. They lack a belt to let out. They become dense, precarious places, without room to move and breathe, and accessing parts of the content starts to feel like outfitting a polar expedition.

And so last weekend, we decided to act on my mother's suggestion of buying a sideboard or dresser, to increase our total storage space. Another wriggle in the inexorable settling-in to middle-class existence.

Now, furniture is one of those industries that is much, much better done in Europe than it is out here. We looked, halfheartedly, for antique shops, but failing to find what we wanted, we made a beeline for Danske Møbler (which, we reasoned, must surely sell decent Scandinavian-designed furniture at exorbitant prices).

DM has a huge, modern-looking (if you're from the 80s) showroom in Mt Eden, which we saw from afar while house-hunting, and it was the work of - ooh, about half an hour - to find it again. It's the kind of showroom where, when you amble in, there's a brief period when you wonder whether it's supposed to be open, because there's not a soul in sight, and there is, wonder of wonders, no muzak. Eventually you become aware that the place is, in fact, staffed - but discreetly, like I imagine the public reception room of MI5. You can stroll all around, get your bearings, take the measure of things, before some suave assistant materialises at your shoulder and offers to help.

I like it. Maybe I'll go back just to enjoy the decent sofas and drink the free coffee.

In the end we settled on a beautifully scuplted, rimu dresser - about 20cm lower than I'd have liked, but it will fit the space under the dining-room window to admiration. It has lovingly bevelled edges and rounded corners, feels smooth and solid to the touch. One of the drawers has a cutlery-drawer-like divider lined with felt. I think it was maybe meant for a casino rather than a kitchen, but never mind, at least it's not green felt.

It's due to be delivered roundabout early April. (Why, exactly, does furniture take so long to make? Answers to the comments section please.) Until then, the cupboards will just have to suffer in silence.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

You've got me all curious. How much would I recognise of those not-your things?

I've never taken delivery of a whole pile of not-my stuff as you describe, but I can think of individual objects. Like our late granny's blue-and-white china coffee set, which A Higher Authority thrust on me. It takes up cupboard space and gets used once in a blue moon when I feel compelled to touch it. Compared to today's stuff it's so horribly impractical!

I expect some things (maybe that tea set - is it any use?) are family heirlooms, and our Higher Authority has had firmly in her mind for years that one is mine and another yours, so naturally shipped you your birthright without a second thought!

Cian said...

So Early April is the Date. If you ask me, Furniture Stores have a policy stating that it will be available in x Number of weeks. Perhaps this store has chosen x=6.
It would seem (from watching Anne Robinson on Watchdog in years gone by) that they rarely/often/sometimes/who knows meet those dates.

Honestly I am not trying to put a downer on your date. I have full confidence in DM in this instance.

mumsie said...

bahumbug is partly correct. He was actually keen on his grandma's blue and white coffee set at a time - and we stored that for him at some time when he was between homes! The one you got actually, was left to me by your Auntie Hilda, and though I like it very much I took it upon myself to send it as an heirloom to you. As regards all that sticky tape - you should know that your mother is a Belt AND Braces man. The books from your father were included for padding - or you would have got even more screwed up old newspaper! So shut up and be grateful!

Anyway, your decision to get a dresser/sideboard from D.M. has got me to wish to see the result. Make photos when you have it in place please. I cannot afford another trip down under for a while.

Enjoy your new acquisitions!
Mumsie

vet said...

bahumbug: as I said, they looked vaguely familiar to me, but only vaguely. As you can see, a higher authority has identified them. Feel positively invited to come and inspect them for yourself.

Cian, I have had those thoughts, and now share your unflinching faith in DM.

Ragnhild, I didn't mean to come across as ungrateful for the books... it just tickled me, rather, as I opened the box to find myself unwrapping item after item and thinking "What the hey?"

Deadlyjelly said...

Dude, I can TOTALLY relate.

And I knew there was a point to all that Tetris I played in my youth (Andrew curtailed my youth about five years ago by blocking Internet Tetris sites. Cut off in my prime.)

x

Michelle said...

vet, I just wanted to tell you that your voice came through so clear with this piece. Loved reading it. Great narrative! Thanks for the little break. M

Nodressrehearsal said...

As a professional organizer, I feel obligated to warn you: crowding possessions into cupboards with little consideration for their privacy leads to, well, bad things. Before you know it, there's been unprotected intermingling which leads to more and more stuff.