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I have a splitting headache as DFS insist the sofa I ordered is BROWN – I think it’s shiny silver but what do you see?

Published on May 06, 2025 at 10:37 AM

A MUM claims to be left with a splitting headache after the ‘brown’ sofa she ordered has turned out to be ‘shiny Tin Man silver.’

Veronica Byrne has been left reeling over the colour but DFS, who she bought the sofa from, insist it’s brown – so what do you see?

Woman sitting on a silver sofa in her living room.
Veronica has been left with a headache after her ‘brown’ sofa turned up Tin Man silver
Silver velvet sofa with patterned throw pillows.
She was unable to see the product in person before buying it
DFS website screenshot showing a Harlech Pillow Back Grande Sofa in Chocolate Combination.
The sofa on the website appears more brown than what Veronica was sent but DFS say it’s down to lighting

She purchased two Harlech pillow back grande sofas and a footstool in the colour Chocolate Combination from the giant’s , Renfrewshire, store back in February.

But when the £4,513 arrived, Veronica said it was the wrong colour while delivery staff confirmed it was the colour she ordered.

The owner was urged to talk to the in-store staff, which she did.

Veronica headed to the Paisley branch where she was told the sofa, which was advertised as having a ‘metallic sheen’, was the correct colour.

The 52-year-old claims he told her to take the fabric swatch outside the showroom and look at it in natural daylight to confirm it was the correct colour.

Veronica, a manufacturing business owner, says her sofas, which have a ‘strong chemical smell’, don’t match the in-store swatch or the online advert and are so bright they’re giving her a headache.

While she has now demanded a refund from the store, she claims DFS has only offered to take back the sofas – at a cost of £1,353.

DFS said the ‘perceived colour of an object can change depending on the light source within a room’ and that the swatch matched her sofa ‘perfectly’.

Veronica, from Paisley, Renfrewshire, said: “The sample in stock wasn’t chocolate, the one I saw was cream.

“I don’t know if cream hides the sheen, or people have sat on it and touched it, but it doesn’t look half as shiny as it does in store as it does in my house.

“I found it hard to decide what it was going to look like with a sample, so the girl said I could see it online.

“I saw it on the . I saw this photograph of a brown sofa so I said ‘that’ll be fine’.

I have a look at it every few days and think ‘maybe I could live with it?’ and then I go ‘no’.

Veronica Bryne

“[When they were delivered] I immediately said ‘I don’t think this is right sofa lads, hold on because it’s supposed to be chocolate’ they checked the label and they said that it was.

“A metallic sheen? I couldn’t believe when they took it out of the packaging how shiny it was, it was like tin foil with a sheen of brown, rather than a chocolate sofa with a metallic sheen.

“I’ve got huge covers over it to protect it. I have a look at it every few days and think ‘maybe I could live with it?’ and then I go ‘no’.

“You wouldn’t believe how shiny it is, it’s like the Tin Man. I can’t believe anyone has chosen that sofa and not been surprised by how shiny it is.

“It’s like a 3D shine, it’s horrible looking and it also gives me a headache.”;

The ‘Chocolate Combination’ sofa is described as being upholstered ‘in plush, opulent velvet – a tufted fabric with a soft, smooth feel, a metallic sheen and a subtle grid pattern in the weave’.

After going to the store to complain, Veronica said she was told by a staff member that to see the true colour of the swatch she’d need to go outside in natural daylight.

Veronica said: “The member of staff I spoke to said ‘let’s take it outside and you’ll see what the true colour is’.

“I said ‘nobody sold me a sofa by telling me to go outside with the colours, if your showroom can’t show the colours correctly then how can you have expected me to buy a sofa in good faith?’

“I told him ‘I can assure you I’m not keeping that sofa, it’s like tin foil’.”;

Veronica has contacted DFS in a bid to cancel the credit agreement and get the sofas removed. She claims the furniture giant has agreed to take them away, providing she pays £1,353.

Veronica said: “I don’t think the description is accurate, it’s definitely misdescribed.

“If you look at the photograph it looks like a chocolate sofa – I like the colour on the website.

“I want them to take away the sofas, I’d love it if they gave me the sofas that are on the internet. I just want what I was sold.

“This is against my , it’s been mis-sold, it’s not as described.

“The fact the guy even said to me ‘if you take this outside you’ll see the same colour as it is in your house’. Why are the lights not showing what this colour is inside the store?

“Head office said I can return it if I pay 30% of the total cost. I’m now disputing the charge and have also done a Section 75 claim through the finance company.”;

A DFS spokesman said: “At DFS we take customer service extremely seriously and we are sorry to hear of any occasion when a customer is disappointed with the colour of the sofa selected.

“As the perceived colour of an object can change depending on the light source within a room, ranging from direct sunlight through to artificial light, the same sofa will look subtly different in every customer’s home.

“It is therefore the customer’s responsibility to choose the right colour for their home and fabric swatches can be ordered before purchasing to help with this decision making process.

“The type of fabric selected also plays a role in how the product looks in someone’s living space. In this instance, the body fabric of the sofa Ms Byrne chose is advertised as having a metallic sheen, which will reflect light differently depending on the direction of the light source in the room, and therefore affect the colour.

“According to our records, and Ms Byrne’s own account, she visited the store to view the sofa in person and she chose the Chocolate combination from the fabric swatch book for this range.

“When she expressed her concern that the wrong colour had been delivered, we visited her home with the same fabric swatch book from the store, and confirmed a perfect match – the colour she ordered is the colour she received.

“There was no manufacturing fault found and we’re confident that the product is as described, fit for purpose and of satisfactory quality, therefore it doesn’t meet the right to reject criteria.

“Like Ms Byrne’s order, the vast majority of our sofas are made-to-order and not stock based products.

“Occasionally, customers may not like the sofas they have chosen, or have a change of heart once they’re delivered, and in these instances we try to work with the customer to find a mutually beneficial resolution as a gesture of goodwill.

“In this instance we have offered a reselection with a fee of 20% of the order cost.

“This fee covers the cost of picking up the sofa, checking and processing the item back through our central distribution network, and the cost of selling the item at a reduced price within our clearance stock.

“This offer remains open and we would like to work with Ms Byrne to help her find a sofa more suitable for her home.”;

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