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2025-09-04 16:07:10
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emma
2025-09-01 15:24:39
Awesome! came just as described. Only issue was with the small wooden tabs, just be gentle pushing those in. I ended up skipping that part and going straights to the screws. The wooden tabs are more of a placeholder anyway. Easy assembly!
W. B.
2025-08-11 10:29:02
I asked a handy friend who normally loves to assemble stuff put this little bench together. He was exasperated by the poor quality and asked me to finish it myself. I did get it together and it is working great but I'm guessing it was less than all the others for that reason.
Anonymous
2025-07-14 16:09:51
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Kellie F
2025-07-10 16:02:36
Worked great for maybe a week. Then I noticed the screws were coming loose. Broke and was super dangerous to use at that point. Eventually the whole thing fell apart
kira
2025-06-25 10:05:27
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ASC
2025-05-15 13:59:38
Several of our family members (ages 12yr-40yr) tried a friend’s headstand chair in yoga class and loved it, so I thought I’d order one from this brand because it was cheaper than the “FeetUp†version, and the reviews I read said this headstand trainer was just as good as the “original.†Thought I’d give it a shot since it was at least half the price, at the time I ordered it.Here are some of my observations…The first Yes4All headstand trainer that I ordered (white pad): The cross beams didn’t get all the way tight. One screw bolt wouldn’t even tighten all the way and kept spinning and spinning inside the leg, even though it was in all the way.The screws bolts are halfway recessed into the legs of the chair. (The FeetUp screw bolts are just barely recessed into the side of the legs, so the screw bolts span basically the whole leg(s) and then also go into the cross beams.)The shoulder pad on the Yes4All chair is thicker, but it’s also slightly harder (and more uncomfortable) than the FeetUp brand - even though the FeetUp shoulder pad is a slight bit thinner.The bottom board inside the shoulder pad on the Yes4All hurts the back of the necks that go against it during a headstand.Some of the plywood layers on the first chair were a little bit split out/missing strips of wood.…I returned the first Yes4All headstand trainer in hopes that the second one I ordered from them would be more sturdy and hopefully more comfortable. Thought/hoped maybe I got a dud the first time….The second one (black pad): The deeply recessed screw bolts tightened up a bit better on this one. Yay! Though some of the wood dowels weren’t tight.There were some wood imperfections again, where strips of wood were missing from the surface of the wood, making it just a little bit more uncomfortable to grasp the leg when up-side-down using the chair.The legs on the second one were not totally even on the floor, so the chair wobbled just a little bit when used, because one of the legs was hovering above the floor a bit. I’d have to add something to the bottom of the one leg to fix it…The shoulder pad was still uncomfortable on the shoulders and back of neck.Because of all of these things (and more that I’ll mention later), no one in my family wanted to use the Yes4All chair for headstands, so I got an on-sale FeetUp trainer instead. We all like it better.FeetUp observations: the FeetUp chair screw bolted together much easier and tighter - no comparison! The dowels fit in their holes much more securely. The legs and cross beams were tight together even without the shoulder pad to stabilize the structure.The shoulder pad is a bit more comfortable (though thinner than the Yes4All), and the board on the bottom of the pad doesn’t irritate the many necks that have used it.The wood finish and quality isn’t perfect, but it’s noticeably better than the Yes4All ones.The non-skid pads are tough, screwed in rubber instead of a thin stick on pad.More comparison observations:The Yes4All is a slight bit taller than FeetUp - frame wise and padding wise.The FeetUp is wider than the Yes4All and feels just a little bit (but noticeably) less likely to wobble.They’re the same length from back to front of legs.The plywood of the FeetUp is thinner - BUT it’s wider. The edges of the FeetUp wood are rounded/sanded. The Yes4All are not. These particular aspects are most noticeable when grabbing the frame while in a headstand. The FeetUp feels more stable/wider for the palms and more comfortable with the rounded edges. My husband preferred the FeetUp for his wide hands, as did every member of our family (7yr-40yr) who tried the chairs from both brands.I really, really wanted this Yes4All headstand trainer to work for us because it was so much cheaper than the FeetUp, but if no one in my family will use it because it’s uncomfortable (and they already knew the more comfortable features of the FeetUp trainer), and it wobbles and/or doesn’t go together tightly… then it just isn’t a useful, comfortable, or safe enough purchase for us.I thought about making little pads to slide over the arms of the Yes4All chair, to make it more comfortable to hold on to. I thought about making a padded cover to go over the existing shoulder pad, to cover that hard bottom board and make it overall more comfortable. I thought about sanding the edges of the plywood and refinishing the wood, and fixing the short leg by adding a thicker rubber pad on the bottom… But I thought - by the time I spend even more time I don’t have for this project, and more money, I might as well have purchased an on-sale FeetUp trainer that I already know the whole family likes better. So that’s what I did.
joanna 123
2025-05-01 11:19:49
This is very good, my kids love to play with it, and it is a good instrument to practice.
Don
2025-01-31 16:35:23
This appears to be basically a knock-off of a more expensive brand, but works fine for household yoga. The extra insert to turn it into a bench is junk, however: The thumbscrews to attach it are very awkward since the holes don't line up well.
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