Re: Wanna Mirra



When I sat in the Aeron chair, Sizes B and C, I noticed a BIG
difference between where the end of the seat part hit my legs. The
sales person said that I have long legs and that I would need the C
size. Feeling like Goldilocks in the Three Bears saga, I sat in three
different chairs, two Aerons and the Nightingale chair.

The only difference between the Nightingale chair and the two Aerons
was that the Nightingale seat had that memory foam. The seat of the
Nightingale chair also was more comfortable than the hard mesh of the
Aerons for my ***. LOL

I saw this Nightingale chair online for 649 and 400 bucks, and I am
still leaning towards the Nightingale chair at this juncture. The
lumbar support was great on both the Aeron and the Nightingale, but
that soft memory foam, wide seat, and where it hit me on my upper legs
was a better fit.

The Mirra chair, which I haven't had a chance to sit in yet, is one
size fits all. There are no Sizes B and C. I still want to sit in
it, though, before I make my purchase to be sure I am getting the
right chair for me. Here's the link: http://seatingzone.com/product/NGL-6100
..

Jennie
Washington, D.C.

On May 8, 3:46 am, Melinda Meahan - take out TRASH to reply
<mmea...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Margie wrote:
Can you tilt the seat pan down so you minimize the pressure on the
backs of your thighs? I feel that sometimes, too -- usually when I'm
slumped down in the chair and not sitting up as straight as I should.
It's a good reminder, but I think tilting the seat a bit down in the
front might help, too.

I haven't figured out how to do that and still allow the back to tilt
back, but at this point I have quit using it for a while to see if it
makes a difference.


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