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Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Green Living / Organic Furniture. Going Green and Nontoxic on a Budget

Organic Furniture. Going Green and Nontoxic on a Budget

by Sarah Pope / Affiliate Links ✔

Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • Searching for Safe Furniture
  • Toxins in Conventional Furniture
  • Safe Bed is the MOST Important Purchase
  • Organic Furniture: Is There Really Such a Thing?
  • Selection and Affordability
  • What About Leather?
  • How to Ensure Your Furniture is Safe+−
    • Test Foam for Fire Retardants
    • Stop the Outgassing of Formaldehyde
  • How to Source Nontoxic Furnishings

How to identify and source safe, nontoxic, green, and organic furniture for your home and office that is budget conscious and also practical for households with children.

green organic living room furniture purchased on a budget

I’ve written several articles in the past about the importance of sourcing nontoxic mattresses and pillows to facilitate deep, sound sleep habits. But what about furniture?

Most of us sit quite a bit and even sleep on the couch occasionally (you know, zonking out during a boring Netflix selection).

Considering the purchase of organic furniture when budgeting for home furnishing is nearly as important a decision.

Searching for Safe Furniture

One person grappling with this decision recently emailed me about it to ask for input. Kyra writes:

I love your blog! I have a suggestion for one…searched your site and don’t think you ever talked about it before– I am considering updating my living room couches, but I’ve read that most furniture is sprayed with all kinds of chemicals. Since our family room is where my family spends a ton of time (playing, napping, snuggling, snacking), I want to buy something non-toxic. Is that possible? Where and how do I find furniture that isn’t full of chemicals, fire retardants and formaldehyde?

Can you give us some tips on several brands/companies or stores and what to look for, please? What did you purchase for your family? Your article about mattresses was great so I was hoping you have helpful tips for furniture too (even though, if I remember correctly, you only recommended one particular brand). Thank you for providing us with such valuable information to keep us healthy!

This is a great question. Unfortunately, I have not discovered clear-cut answers especially if you are furnishing your home on a budget.

My husband and I have never placed much importance on the need for fancy decorating in our home (primarily because my husband really doesn’t care one way or another, and I am an avowed minimalist in that department). However, we have always managed to procure quality, nontoxic furniture despite spending very little.

Below is the strategy we have employed during our 25 years together. It has served to keep the furniture we buy affordable, green, and as organic as possible.

Perhaps it might help give you some ideas too. First, let’s go over what’s available on the market currently and how it is or isn’t an option for those seeking a chemical-free living environment.

Toxins in Conventional Furniture

Before we talk about solutions, let’s identify the problem with conventional furniture today. This includes dormitory furniture used in most colleges and boarding schools. The health issues are primarily three-fold:

  • The foam in the cushions is made of petroleum-based polyurethane, a highly flammable product. To rectify this, toxic, cancer-causing flame retardants are added. This synthetic foam in the cushions breaks down over time. The result is dust containing fire retardant chemicals polluting the indoor air which everyone breaths. These chemicals have become ubiquitous in the environment. They are found in wildlife tissue samples (both land and sea), breastmilk and other human body fluids. (1)
  • The wood used in typical furniture products is not solid. It is comprised of particleboard. Particleboard manufacture involves the use of formaldehyde. This chemical has been identified as a known carcinogen by the National Toxicology Program. (2)
  • The half-life of formaldehyde outgassing from particleboard is about one year. Heat makes it outgas faster. However, long term studies indicate that significant outgassing continues for at least 5 years and possibly longer. (3)
  • Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from adhesives, dyes, and/or Scotchgard, which carries the unique risk of perfluorochemicals. The EPA says that these VOCs pollute indoor air by outgassing. (4)

Safe Bed is the MOST Important Purchase

For a health-conscious consumer seeking to furnish the home environment with nontoxic items, conventional furniture is quite simply a non-starter. Don’t forget – this includes the mattress you sleep on all night long!

Fortunately, there are nontoxic mattresses on the market that are very affordable and last as long or longer than conventional toxic ones (find healthy mattress brands I’ve vetted here).

Organic Furniture: Is There Really Such a Thing?

While finding a nontoxic mattress is getting easier and affordable today, the same cannot be said for organic furniture!

A few brands boast organic cotton upholstery, but watch out for the materials underneath! There is a lot of greenwashing going on in the furniture industry. A savvy consumer needs to be on high alert so as not to get scammed by clever marketing.

For example, the mainstream furniture manufacturers Pottery Barn and Ikea have a line of eco-friendly furniture which is clearly a step up from conventional toxic furniture of the Rooms-to-Go variety. This is a positive trend for sure!

However, I personally would not buy anything in these lines. Why? While the furniture is fire retardant-free and made of sustainably produced materials and perhaps even organic cotton, it is still a toxic choice from a health perspective.

For example, the recycled, FSC-certified wood used in the Pottery Barn line still has the potential to outgas formaldehyde and other chemicals since it can be made from all or a mix of post-consumer waste and VOC containing adhesives and upholstery dyes.

A more intimate example of this consumer trap is recycled toilet paper. While environmentally friendly, this is a toxic choice for the consumer.

In other words, an environmentally friendly, green product is not necessarily a nontoxic and healthy choice for your family!

Selection and Affordability

Let’s say you’ve managed to find organic furniture that delivers what is claimed. There are a few brands out there that are flame-retardant-free, fully recyclable, and use solid wood frames, certified organic textiles, and water-based adhesives.

This furniture brand is a good option to consider.

Unfortunately, an option like this is more expensive than conventional choices.

With conventional furniture a sketchy choice and organic furniture expensive, what is a health-conscious consumer to do? Let’s dig deeper.

What About Leather?

Some of you may have considered leather or faux leather furniture as an option to reduce toxins.

First off, let’s scratch faux leather off the list right away. Faux leather is made from a fabric base. This base is chemically treated with wax, VOC emitting dye, or polyurethane to achieve the desired color and texture. No thanks.

Real leather undergoes a tanning process that involves many carcinogenic chemicals and solvents that would make any environmentalist cringe. The process is so toxic to both the environment and the workers, in fact, that the EPA and Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) have closed most USA tanneries. (5)

At one time (believe it or not), Boston was a world leader in the production of leather goods, but so many pollutants were dumped into rivers and streams that the dirty water runoff kicked off an environmental backlash from consumers.

As for the interior components of a leather couch, there would be little difference from upholstered conventional furniture.

Fire retardant foam and cheap, formaldehyde emitting particleboard are favored over a safer solid hardwood frame. Watch out for “engineered hardwood” too which uses plywood construction.

All plywood contains formaldehyde glues which outgas over time.

Some leather furniture makers use hypo-allergenic foams and true hardwood frames, but the leather tanning process is still a thorny issue for those that are chemically sensitive.

How to Ensure Your Furniture is Safe

If all of this information has you worried about furniture that was purchased before you started greening your lifestyle and improving your diet, take heart. There are some things you can do now to make sure your existing furniture is safe for your family.

Test Foam for Fire Retardants

Duke University’s Superfund Research Center is assisting consumers by offering foam testing services. You simply send in a small sample of the foam from your sofas, couches, or chairs.

The research team is testing foams to examine how badly fire retardant chemicals continue to off-gas over time. (6)

Stop the Outgassing of Formaldehyde

Another option is to purchase Safecoat Safe Seal.

This unique product is applied to particleboard to block the off-gassing of formaldehyde from processed wood products such as plywood, particleboard, and pressed wood.

It is especially practical to use on tables and the frames of sofas, couches, and chairs that are not composed of solid wood.

How to Source Nontoxic Furnishings

If at this point you feel discouraged or your head is spinning, take a deep breath. You can do what my husband and I have done for 25 years to keep things simple, safe, and affordable.

Buy. Used. Furniture.

Back when we bought our house in 1993, nontoxic furniture items didn’t exist and even if they did, we couldn’t afford them. So we developed a habit of scouring estate sales, consignment and antique shops, and even garage sales for quality furniture that was made with solid wood and/or old enough (5+ years) where any outgassing issues were long gone.

Not only does this strategy ensure a safe living environment, but it also saves a ton of money and is kind of a fun hobby too.

Probably the best example of this approach is the solid oak dining table we have that I am typing at right now. We got it for a song and have never had to worry that we were breathing formaldehyde fumes with every meal we ate there as a family.

What strategies have you employed over the years to source nontoxic, organic furniture?

nontoxic sustainable inexpensive chair and couch

References

(1) How Dangerous is Your Couch?

(2) Report on the Carcinogenicity of Formaldehyde

(3) Long-Term Formaldehyde Emissions from Medium-Density Fiberboard in a Full-Scale Experimental Room: Emission Characteristics and the Effects of Temperature and Humidity

(4) Coming Clean. Did 3M and DuPont ignore evidence of health risks?

(5) Chicago’s Last Tannery

(6) Duke University. What’s in My Foam?

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Category: Green Living
Sarah Pope

Sarah Pope MGA has been a Health and Nutrition Educator since 2002. She is a summa cum laude graduate in Economics from Furman University and holds a Master’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

She is the author of three books: Amazon #1 bestseller Get Your Fats Straight, Traditional Remedies for Modern Families, and Living Green in an Artificial World.

Her four eBooks Good Diet…Bad Diet, Real Food Fermentation, Ketonomics, and Ancestrally Inspired Dairy-Free Recipes are available for complimentary download via Healthy Home Plus.

Her mission is dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. She is a sought after lecturer around the world for conferences, summits, and podcasts.

Sarah was awarded Activist of the Year in 2010 at the International Wise Traditions Conference, subsequently serving on the Board of Directors of the nutrition nonprofit the Weston A. Price Foundation for seven years.

Her work has been covered by numerous independent and major media including USA Today, ABC, and NBC among many others.

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Reader Interactions

Comments (97)

  1. Heather

    Jan 7, 2018 at 10:50 am

    Hi Sarah, what are your thoughts on buying used furniture, and the risk of bed bugs? I’m looking to buy furniture for my daughter’s bedroom, that is over 5 years old and already done its off-gassing. With the risk of bringing bedbugs in on furniture, I’m reluctant to do so. Thoughts?

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Jan 7, 2018 at 4:06 pm

      You would definitely have to watch out for that! Here is a bed bug detector that can help. http://amzn.to/2CPrR1a

  2. Sara

    Nov 14, 2017 at 11:06 am

    I echo comments by other posters. That dust seems just s likely, if not more, to be she’d by older furniture than a newer piece made without flame retardants. Yeah, the solid wood frame on old pieces is great, but even before the most recent toxic flame retardants were in use, there were others, as far back as the 1970’s. So unless you’re going truly vintage, or stripping it down to the frame and replacing both the foam and the upholstery of a used piece, you are not buying safe furniture by buying used.

    Reply
  3. Diana

    Nov 9, 2017 at 9:59 am

    If previous owner of the used furniture sprayed air fresheners or used toxic candles in their home, that doesn’t seem to ever off gas. Very toxic!!!

    Reply
  4. Diane

    Nov 5, 2017 at 4:18 pm

    Be careful buying used furniture. Bed bugs have become a real issue and hide in mattresses and furniture.

    Reply
  5. Sabrina

    Oct 24, 2017 at 9:49 pm

    Absolutely right. Flame retardant chemicals are NOT volatile, therefore they will not evaporate or offgas. They simply are release as particles to get trapped in your normal house dust. Small children who put their hands in their mouths all the time have the highest body burden of these chemicals, because they crawl on the floors and (FR-treated) carpeting, and then ingest the dust.

    Reply
  6. Steph

    Sep 27, 2017 at 3:06 pm

    Does anyone have any advice on making your own furniture?

    Wood pallet furniture is popular these days, but I have concerns over the toxicity of that wood. What could you do to remedy that? Seal it? How effective would that be?

    Additionally, you could sew your own cushions, pillows, and even bean bag chairs! But does anyone know what type of filling does best for each application? Or how to make it relatively waterproof, or at least washable?

    So many questions! Thanks to anyone who has any resources or adcive to pass on! And thank your for the blog post! 🙂

    Reply
  7. Jess Turano (Henry)

    Sep 25, 2017 at 11:03 pm

    I’m happy to see you here addressing really important issues but feel a little disappointed that you are saying Flame retardants will off gas. They will not, they simply break down into dust for the life of the furniture since there are literally pounds of them added. The dust is then inhaled by us and remains in our system. This is a huge risk especially for young children.

    Reply
  8. Penny

    Sep 18, 2017 at 5:56 pm

    I’m discouraged, what is the answer? Where can we we find an affordable eco friendly reupholsterer in the Los Angeles (west LA best) area that carries color options other than beige and white?

    Reply
  9. Nerissa

    Sep 8, 2017 at 8:47 pm

    Darn! lol – any suggestions then on where to find non toxic, well priced bed frames? Thanks SO much!

    Reply
  10. Nerissa

    Sep 8, 2017 at 11:31 am

    Hi Sarah, Ikea sells solid wood bed frames we are interested in but they have a lacquer and/or veneer on different parts I believe….should I be concerned about the finishing products?? Thank you so much!!

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Sep 8, 2017 at 12:18 pm

      Yes, that is important to examine as well. Good point!

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