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$1 → $1M · 5 tiers

Sofa.

Five sofas, five completely different relationships with comfort, design, and the people who make them.

Roadside-find futon

Material
Flatpack pine frame held together by mismatched bolts, foam cushion that has lost roughly 60% of its original thickness, polyester cover with at least one mystery stain.
Function
Folds into a bed if you're brave. Provides surface for laundry, cats, and the occasional friend who missed the last train.
History
Made with scrap but with soul — somebody bought this for $80 in 2019, used it through three flatshares, and left it on the sidewalk with a 'free, still works' sign. You picked it up at 2 AM. It is now your sofa.
What bumps the price
A throw blanket to hide the stain (+$15), a real foam topper to add 4 cm of mercy to the seat (+$30), bolts that match each other (+$5).

IKEA KIVIK-style sectional

Material
Solid-pine frame, polyurethane foam in three densities, removable washable cotton-blend cover in 'storm grey'.
Function
Three-seater with a lounge end. Survives one cat, two house-moves, and an unknown number of pizza accidents.
History
IKEA introduced the modular sofa concept in 1976 to their Swedish catalogue. The KIVIK family alone has sold over 12 million units globally; it might be the most-sat-on sofa design of the 21st century.
What bumps the price
Replacement cover in linen blend (+$120), genuine IKEA chaise extension (+$180), a delivery service that doesn't make you assemble it yourself (+$60).

Article Sven leather sofa

Material
Top-grain leather upholstery in Charme Tan, kiln-dried hardwood frame, sinuous-spring suspension, tufted bench seat, splayed walnut tapered legs.
Function
The Instagram apartment sofa. Looks like a million dollars in a 200-square-foot studio.
History
Article launched the Sven in 2016 as a direct-to-consumer answer to the $4,000 Restoration Hardware version. They cut the retail middle-man and tripled their profit margin. The Sven became a millennial design cliché within 18 months — and stayed comfortable enough that nobody minded.
What bumps the price
Bench cushion replaced with three separate cushions (+$200), full-aniline leather upgrade from semi-aniline (+$400), 4-seater length instead of standard 3-seater (+$600).

B&B Italia 'Tufty-Time' by Patricia Urquiola

Material
Modular polyurethane foam blocks in custom upholstery (typically a velvet-cotton blend), removable covers, lacquered MDF base, hand-assembled in Novedrate, Italy.
Function
The 'Chesterfield meets bean-bag' look. Reconfigurable into roughly twelve different layouts. Exceptionally comfortable for what looks like a giant tufted brick.
History
Patricia Urquiola designed the Tufty-Time in 2005 for B&B Italia. It became the favourite sofa of every hotel-lounge designer on Earth and shows up in roughly 40% of luxury Airbnb listings. An entire interior-design vocabulary copies it.
What bumps the price
Velvet upholstery upgrade from cotton (+$1,500), genuine certificate of authenticity (+$300), B&B's white-glove delivery service that builds it in your living room (+$500).

Restored 1929 Mies van der Rohe Barcelona Sofa — original commission

Material
Hand-stitched cattle hide on hand-buffed stainless steel frame, original 1929 leather aged to a mahogany patina, restored by a single specialist workshop in Berlin.
Function
Museum-grade seating. One of fewer than a dozen original units that survived World War II — and the only one with documented provenance from the original 1929 Barcelona International Exposition.
History
Mies van der Rohe and Lilly Reich designed the Barcelona collection for the German Pavilion at the 1929 Barcelona International Exposition — a temporary building meant for a single summer. Most of the original furniture was either destroyed when the pavilion was dismantled or scattered into private collections. This sofa was rediscovered in a Buenos Aires estate in 2018 and is the only known surviving 1929 sofa in original condition.
What bumps the price
Documented provenance with the original 1929 manifest (+$300K), restoration certificate from Knoll's archive (+$200K), a matching Barcelona chair from the same exposition (+$1.2M).

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