Look great for the price.....needed something to use with a used table I boughtThese chairs say the material is metal. They are not. They are very flimsy plastic. They rock back and forth and side to side very easily. Backrest bends back if you put any pressure on them. Might work for small children, but I didn't feel safe in this chair as an adult.While the item description mysteriously does not specify material, I was shocked to find that the chair is a single $75 piece of plastic. I had assumed I was buying a wood chair from the picture and price, but alas I was wrong. Too bad you need to drill down to the reviews to figure that out.These flex and wobble and will be returned. They're good for maybe some small kids, but an average adult? No way. I should have read more before ordering because taking this huge box in for a return is going to be a pain.These chairs are plastic, they are not “great quality” like the description states.Save your $150 and don’t buy these chairs.So I do use these frequently- one right in my front hall area for my kids to dress and one positioned decoratively somewhat near our kitchen table in case we have an extra person and need a spare chair for a kid.The one pictured is positioned next to where my kid’s shoes are kept in a cabinet, so they sit on it to get dressed in shoes in the am or sit to take them off. It’s working for the use that I’m using them for (occasional kid use), but I don’t really feel like they are sturdy enough to be used at our kitchen table regularly, which is where I was originally wanting to use them. So in general, I’d say I’m disappointed in the sturdiness, but I’m determined to use them and sort of “making the best of it” by throwing them in corners.The back in particular (pictured) has a hollowed out appearance too to the back of the chair to the plastic that I don’t love the look of when pushed into a table. It just felt a little like a not finished or high end look- it just looked a little cheap the way the back of the chair had a hollowed out plastic edge to the back/top of the chair. I therefore prefer these positioned sort of in corners with a small pillow to dress them up so that you really only see the front of it most of the time, as that’s the part that looks better on this chair than the somewhat cheap looking backs of them.My husband and I are both XL to XXL for our prospective genders (so large and heavy) and here’s just no way these can support either one of us reasonably or regularly. So besides the look of them, They just aren’t sturdy enough to use them at our kitchen where they would get sat on by adults and guests of all sizes. When I sit on it (about 200 lbs) theres a slight give in the legs that I can feel and if I try to lean back there’s a significant bend and wobble to the back of it. I don’t feel like I can comfortably sit or lean for a meal at it and not feel like I might break it. I can maybe use it to stick on a sneaker for a minute or two, but even then I feel myself being a bit ginger with it.I did love that there was no assembly involved though. They were ready to go right out of the box with no work involved, which was excellent and a super big plus.I also love that they are super easy to wipe down and that theres no paint to scratch or dent from vacuum, etc.I could see us dragging these outside too if we were having a BBQ and needed some extra chairs on the deck or outside for a kid’s birthday party. The plastic material makes them a go-to for an extra chair if needed outside and they LOOK a lot nicer than a folding chair would.You do see some lines on the plastic in places from it being molded on seams, but that’s to be expected and didn’t bother me any.Overall I’d only recommend these if using in a kid work space or if you and all your friends are in the 100 to maybe 130 lbs range. Even then I don’t think it’s a great choice for adults, as if you have a guest who’s larger and they sit and break it that would be SO embarrassing for them. In general I’d just put the money for these into something sturdier at a similar price point (IKEA dining chair for example). So in maybe not recommend these at all.I got these for a basement table where my teens and their friends play games and make crafts. Originally I had wood chairs, and they were short lived between the bouncing around, scratches and paint. I got these and another style of chair from the same company (cross back dining chair). If the price is acceptable to you and the design, I would suggest those over these chairs. But these are not a bad choice. and better than any plastic chairs I could find in the same price range.I expected these chairs to be similar to what I could find locally . . . but they are thicker and more sturdy. They arrived completely assembled, and safely wrapped with cardboard and paper padding as well as bubble wrap. There was no damage or warping.These chairs are not the thin bendy plastic that I expected but they are not as solid as a wood chair or the other plastic chairs I mentioned prior. I am 240 lbs and they have quite a lot of wobble for me, as they do for my 150 lb spouse. But they are solid for my teens and tweens, so they should serve a younger and lighter crowd well. The seat is flat and I found needed a pillow on the seat if I was going to sit in it for any amount of time.The back is a nice height as is the seat level, I don't have issues getting in or out of them.The bottoms of the legs of these chairs don't have any sliders to protect floors from scratching or marks.These chairs both had some sharp edges on the bottom which I needed to sand down, and I will be applying my own sliders. Would have been nice for that to be included.These are sturdy, molded in one piece for strength and are comfortable. The problem is that one of the chairs came with uneven legs, thus doesn't set flat on floor. It rocks and is unstable. The other chair is perfect. Speaks to a lack of quality control.