Lovesac to Set up Shop at the Interlock

The fast-growing furniture retailer now has over 100 showrooms throughout the country.
Lovesac is setting up shop at the interlock
Photo: Official

Furniture retailer Lovesac is headed to the Interlock. The brand, which originated in 1995 as a nylon sac — basically, a bean bag chair — retailer, now sells a variety of sacs and modular “sactionals,” and has more than 100 showrooms throughout the country.

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The deal at Lovesac is washable furniture. Their sacs and “sactionals” come with separate inserts and covers, so they’re easy to clean, and the “sactionals” come as modular sets, so they’re easy to rearrange and add to.

Lovesac was named the fastest growing American furniture company by Furniture Today twice (once in 2013 and again in 2017). The company went public in 2018, and in 2019 partnered with textile solutions company Repreve to start making all its upholstery fabric from 100% repurposed plastic bottles.

What Now Atlanta reached out to Lovesac, but the company declined to offer more details about the new Interlock showroom at this time. A representative noted that the furniture store would have more details by the end of 2021, so don’t expect an opening until 2022, at the earliest.

We love a good sectional, especially one made from repurposed plastic, so when Lovesac makes its Interlock debut, we’ll be first at the door to test out their sacs ourselves.

Sydney Rende

Sydney Rende

Sydney Rende is a freelance writer and soon-to-be graduate of Syracuse University’s MFA program in Creative Writing. Her work has been published in The New York Times Style Magazine, The Michigan Quarterly Review, The New Ohio Review online, and Carve Magazine. She lives in Southern California, where she’s completing her first short story collection and desperately trying to conform to surf culture.
Sydney Rende

Sydney Rende

Sydney Rende is a freelance writer and soon-to-be graduate of Syracuse University’s MFA program in Creative Writing. Her work has been published in The New York Times Style Magazine, The Michigan Quarterly Review, The New Ohio Review online, and Carve Magazine. She lives in Southern California, where she’s completing her first short story collection and desperately trying to conform to surf culture.
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