- The substance under my bent back is wonderful.
- The painting is of the highest caliber, like it was done in a sandbox. The chair is crooked, and assembling it was impossible. Typically, the handles' attachment holes for the back are misaligned.
- Purchased for the office to facilitate a bank transfer; it is both practical and economical.
- Fabrics that absorb moisture are used in upholstered furniture. Shedding anything here is more costly than shedding skin.
- All three of these factors—style, practicality, and cost—are equally important.
- Not a thing needs fixing.
- Chair for working at the computer that is extremely comfortable and cushy.
- Did not locate.
- Pros: Roomy enough to lie flat on your back, comfortable enough to sleep on. Your chair-time can easily exceed 12 hours.
- The lowest sitting position is 10 cm higher than the one I grew used to for many years; I never adapted to the plastic cross (which finally cracked) or the unpleasant fit (I used to it, but I felt upset for the first month). The chair's legs, which were bent to the right side a month after purchase, prove that it wasn't constructed by human hands. After four months of use, the chair's back collapsed to the floor after the fastening bolt tore through a plastic armrest (a component of the chair's power frame). In other words, the chair itself did not come loose from the back, but it did fall into ruin. Something got stuck in the rocking mechanism and it stopped working in the second month of operation. To wedge it, I flipped the chair over and pressed the button for the elevator. Every three to four days, the mechanism would become stuck and cease functioning. The regulator for the swing mechanism ceased operating on day two, which was another drawback.
- Not a DREAM chair, then!