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BUY HABUFA FURNITURE AT MAJOR DISCOUNTS CALL 07816410086 SOME OF THE MOST BEAUTIFUL FURNITURE FROM THE BEST HIGH STREET AND ONLINE RETAILERS PLEASE CALL US ON 07816410086  WITH ANY QUERIES. HAVE YOU VISITED YET??? 40,000 SQFT OR ALMOST EVERY TYPE OF FURNITURE KNOWN TO MAN . HABUFA, HARVEYS, JOHN LEWIS, LAURA ASHLEY, NEXT, ETC ETC Possibly the best selection in the entire UK 10 am till 6 pm Sunday 11 am till 5 pm Bank Holidays 11 am till 5 pm Large free car park. Call for any information you might need on 01244 316 041 Some of the most beautiful upholstery you ever saw at 50% below the normal retail price IN THOSE OTHER STORES..:) Dutch dining furniture at ridiculous clearance prices. THE BEST SELECTION OF BEDS IN THE UK. WE SELL NEW MATTRESSES FROM OTHER RETAILERS AT UPTO 60% BELOW THEIR PRICES. We are inundated with stock, its pouring out the walls. Come and grab a bargain!!! Not only Harvey’s, we have furniture from all the other major retailers at prices that will shock you.
See our Ebay store for a few choice  Bargains……. http://stores.ebay.co.uk/furniturestockclearance See our Upholstery page for details, click here… Against the Grain clearance furniture Habufa dining Tables NOW 80% off the retail price, very slight seconds. We are the only company in the entire UK, specializing in up-market furniture clearance. We sell product from several major High Street Retail chains. We don’t sell online, except through Ebay, our products sell too quickly to update a website. We only sell from our 40,000 square foot Chester store. Please visit, we promise to surprise you with an eclectic mix of fabulous furniture. Furniture Village Laura Ashley Tesco Next Marks and Spencer clearance furniture. plus some high end European furniture companies and several others who prefer that we do not mention them by name specifically. Although we carry almost random stock levels and products, you can be sure that what we always have is top end furniture at about half the price you would see it in any of the other stores.
It is genuine clearance, and might be cancelled orders, discontinued stock, customer returns, even overstock. Monday to Saturday 10 am till 6 pm call for any information you might need on 01244 316 041 CLICK BELOW FOR SOME ELEPHANT SIZED ENCOURAGEMENT….Midday on a wet Wednesday and I feel as if I’ve entered homeware heaven. best chair to correct postureIn front of me are shelves stacked with beautiful bedding, including an Orla Kiely duvet set I’ve been lusting after for months.large swivel chairs for sale Nearby, in the dining section, I’ve got my eye on a set of elegant Dartington Crystal wine glasses; retro salon chairs for salewhile in the furniture department, there’s a stylish OH Chair by Umbra that’d look perfect in my home office; tub chairs for sale canada
and the bathroom section boasts fluffy Christy bath sheets that’d rival those in the poshest hotel. But more than the beautiful selection of products, what’s making my pulse quicken is the prices. That Orla Kiely duvet set? Just £49.99 instead of the usual £95. Only £12.99 instead of £30. cost of dental chair ukThe chair is a snip at £19.99 instead of more than £40; sofa and swivel chair for saleand the fluffy towels are £9.99 each - a saving of 76 per cent on the usual £42 price. dutch design chair nz Jenny Wood brandishes her bags after scouting for deals in HomeSense's Watford storewhere to buy saucer chair Jenny was stunned to find savings of up to 60 per cent on stylish homewares from furtniture to candlesfolding chairs for horse shows
Grey retro two-seater sofa, £399.99. No, I’m not immersed in the Harrods sale, but a rather less glamorous retail park in Watford. I’m in HomeSense, the surprise secret shopping destination of choice for stylists, interior designers and savvy shoppers alike that’s taking the world of homeware by storm. Being a bargain hunter used to be something to keep quiet about; but these days, if your champagne comes from Aldi and your designer dress was in the sales, it’s almost a badge of honour. But while this may be the case with food and fashion, until recently, the same wasn’t true of homeware. Now, even the most discerning of customers are making a regular pilgrimage to HomeSense stores to browse furniture and accessories from trusted names such as DKNY and Alessi. While the designer goods on sale here are similar to or the same as those you’d find in John Lewis or House of Fraser, there’s one huge difference. The prices can be more than 60 per cent lower.
And though you’d never guess, HomeSense is owned by the same company as TK Maxx and operates in exactly the same way - offering top name brands at rock bottom prices. The bargain homewares chain has a core of devoted fans who can't get enough of the cut-price goods Mason Cash green apple mixing bowl £9.99. An identical bowl from the same brand costs £30 in Selfridges; HomeSense Coffee Pot is £12.99, while brands such as Moka sell them for over £10 more The two stores couldn’t feel more different. Whereas TK Maxx generally has a jumble sale, chaotic feel; HomeSense is more zen, with wood effect floors, calming olive green and cream walls, gentle background music and tidy, organised shelves. Selling products only for the home (along with a smattering of pet accessories, gourmet food and garden items), everything is arranged neatly. Rather than the homeware section of TK Maxx which can feel like the bric-a-brac section of a charity shop - and that’s being kind - everything is grouped by department, colour and style.
There’s a display with beautiful oriental teaware; walls of perfectly plumped cushions; and a seasonal area with everything you’d need for your spring clean. This is retail therapy in the true sense of the word. I bump into Laura Edwards, 60, a mental health worker, who’s eagerly inspecting notecards and writing paper that wouldn’t look out of place in a Knightsbridge stationer’s, yet cost just £3 per pack. Hemingway Vintage bread bin £5.99. A staggering saving compared to the original RRP of £25. Even Amazon sells it for £7 more; HomeSense's orange anglepoise lamp is £24.99, but designer versions can go for over £200 ‘This is my refuge,’ she confides. ‘Whenever I’m stressed, I come in here for a browse and I feel calm. I love the candles, the gardening stuff, and I’ve just bought some roasting dishes. My best buy was a huge wooden clock for £100. It’s the sort of thing you’d pay a fortune for elsewhere.’ Laura’s not alone in being evangelical.
While HomeSense modestly deny they’re competing with anyone else on the High Street, their clever blend of style and value is tempting shoppers away from even the most middle class of department stores. Take musician Rebecca Boyle, 47, who’s here for the first time with her daughter, Ella, ten. ‘I usually shop in John Lewis - that’s our staple,’ she explains, ‘but having just come here for a wander after being given something from HomeSense as a Christmas gift, I’ve seen some lovely bits and bobs at very reasonable prices. I’ll definitely be back.’ The secret lies in the lightning-quick turnover. Unlike most retailers, who buy stock just once a season, HomeSense’s buyers are shopping all year long, meaning they can respond to any new trends or customer demand almost immediately. Rose & Cardamom Candle, £6.99. Why pay £28 for a designer Diptyque candle when this lookalike costs £21 less? Marble topped side table £49.99. A table like this would cost you £125 in Next
Chunky knit throw £14.99 A similar one would set you back £125 at John Lewis They snap up both current and end-of-line or past season lines; seek out store cancellations; and drive a hard bargain with manufacturers who want to clear stock. They also have products made just for them, and as a global company (originating from Canada), they source from all over the world, from Italian throws to Indonesian furniture. This means each 21,000 sq ft store - all in retail parks - takes deliveries of thousands of items each week. There isn’t a stock room - products are unloaded straight out onto the shop floor. However, as there may only be a few or even one of each item, you have to be quick. The store operates an ‘If you like it, grab it now’ policy. Having said this, unlike TK Maxx, there’s no wild catfights over cushions, or fisticuffs in the furniture section. Make-up artist Tamara Svano reveals that she bought a leather sofa from HomeSense (the store is pictured above) as the quality of the leather on sale is 'impressive'
Interior designers flock to HomeSense, which stocks clocks and a range of lamps, to pick up anything from leather sofas to picture frames In fact, the nearest thing I see to eyes-on-the-prize determination is when one shopper nervously ‘guards’ a cabinet so that nobody else can bag it before his partner gets to the till. HomeSense’s formula seems to be working. With 39 stores across Britain and another three set to open soon, parent company, the TJX Group saw pre-tax profits grow by an impressive £40 million last year. And what’s surprising is they’ve done all this without mentioning a single brand name. When contacted, the store’s ‘people’ were coy about which designers they stocked. The fact, they sell high-end Frette sheets, Joseph Joseph kitchen utensils and even Jonathan Adler picture frames at ridiculously generous discounts is the reason their customers keep returning. The nearest they’ve got to naming names was to reveal Orla Kiely designed the £12.99 apron with them to raise money for Sport Relief, that featured in the recent special edition of The Great British Bake Off.
HomeSense claims this is to prevent customers being disappointed if they can’t find a specific brand on display in the store. HomeSense's spring/summer 2016 catalogue includes perfectly styled images of how your home would look after picking up their bargains - many at 60 per cent off, following TK Maxx's pricing model Tamara Svano, 30, a make-up artist who works for Harrods, is a regular. ‘I get everything here, from furniture to picture frames,’ she says. ‘I bought a leather sofa - I’m Italian, and anything leather has to be good quality for me to buy it. Meanwhile, in the candle aisle (yes, there really is such a thing), Carli Butler, 32, who’s just started an interior design course, is loading up her basket. ‘I love this place, it’s so much fun,’ she says. ‘I’m doing up my first house and I’m always popping by. Of course, you have to look carefully - there is the odd tacky ornament - but mostly it’s full of what’s on trend, particularly the furniture.’