These stools are easy to put together. They are very versatile. I have bought two sets of these already. The first sets was months ago, and they are still in great condition. I have no complaints with the quality of these stools. I will be buying them again.
These are sturdy and well made. The height is good. The seat is hard but comfortable. I was able to assemble them myself in about 30 minutes. They withstand the challenges of young children well and clean up easy.
Overall, we like the stools. After assembling the first one of the four we purchased, we set it on the floor and it was perfectly level on the floor--no rocking side-to-side.
But then the other three of the four we purchased had the same problem.
None of the other three, after following the instructions perfectly, laid level on the floor. Each rocked like a leg was too short. (It turned out that two legs were too short).
So I decided to stick a cardboard shim between the top of the offending legs and the bottom of the stools seat. I did this to lengthen the two legs that were too short. To do this . . .
1. I tore from the box the bolts had come in, two small cardboard (about the size of a matchbook cover).
2. I then folded these two rectangles in half making a four-layer cardboard shim
3. I unbolted one of the legs that seemed shorter from the bottom of the stools seat
4. To jam this four-layer cardboard shim between the legs top and the bottom of the stools seat, I placed the middle of the cardboard shim between the top of stools leg and the bottom of the stools seat.
5. Then I pushed to force the shim into position, dragging the shim into position as I forced the stools leg back into position atop the bottom rim of the stools seat. (Note: I had tried to just force the shim between the top of the leg and bottom rim of the seat with no success, so I ended up pushing it between the top of the leg and bottom of the stools rim as I pushed the leg back atop the bottom rim of the stool.)
6. I repeated the process for the leg directly across and it leveled the stool.
7. I also had trouble with two of the four stools aligning the chair back to the seat. Tip: bolt the sides then bolt the middle.
Reviews
Good Quality for the price
These stools are easy to put together. They are very versatile. I have bought two sets of these already. The first sets was months ago, and they are still in great condition. I have no complaints with the quality of these stools. I will be buying them again.
Kitchen seating
Easy to assemble, very sturdy.
Perfect for Island in center of kitchen
Needed a small comfortable stool to fit against kitchen island in center of work area. These are perfect.
Ok, look very cheap
Sharp corners, fake stain and wont recommend.
Best chairs and price!
Easy to put together and looks super nice in my kitchen!!
Solid Bar Stools
Thes bar stools are solid wood. Easy to assemble looks great.
Real Wood!
These are sturdy and well made. The height is good. The seat is hard but comfortable. I was able to assemble them myself in about 30 minutes. They withstand the challenges of young children well and clean up easy.
look great
Easy to assemble. Look great! A few chipped places when they arrived, but nothing too noticeable.
Wished they had smoother edges.
The legs on them have very sharp edges. If you are not wearing pants it scrapes your legs.
Three out of four legs required a cardboard shims and lock washers were missing.
Overall, we like the stools. After assembling the first one of the four we purchased, we set it on the floor and it was perfectly level on the floor--no rocking side-to-side. But then the other three of the four we purchased had the same problem. None of the other three, after following the instructions perfectly, laid level on the floor. Each rocked like a leg was too short. (It turned out that two legs were too short). So I decided to stick a cardboard shim between the top of the offending legs and the bottom of the stools seat. I did this to lengthen the two legs that were too short. To do this . . . 1. I tore from the box the bolts had come in, two small cardboard (about the size of a matchbook cover). 2. I then folded these two rectangles in half making a four-layer cardboard shim 3. I unbolted one of the legs that seemed shorter from the bottom of the stools seat 4. To jam this four-layer cardboard shim between the legs top and the bottom of the stools seat, I placed the middle of the cardboard shim between the top of stools leg and the bottom of the stools seat. 5. Then I pushed to force the shim into position, dragging the shim into position as I forced the stools leg back into position atop the bottom rim of the stools seat. (Note: I had tried to just force the shim between the top of the leg and bottom rim of the seat with no success, so I ended up pushing it between the top of the leg and bottom of the stools rim as I pushed the leg back atop the bottom rim of the stool.) 6. I repeated the process for the leg directly across and it leveled the stool. 7. I also had trouble with two of the four stools aligning the chair back to the seat. Tip: bolt the sides then bolt the middle.
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