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Ikea’s wooden hand, bound and gagged

Photo by Michael Symons

An Ikea store in Canada found a creative solution to prevent people from rearranging the store’s wooden model hands to flip people off. The product, called the “HANDSKALAD,” is about a foot tall. The wooden model hands are often used as decoration or to help artists learn how to draw hands. Source: Business Insider

A Reddit post on the “Mildly Interesting” subreddit showed the wooden hand, which can be adjusted to change the finger position, with its middle finger zip-tied down, presumably to prevent customers from raising only the middle finger.

Michael Symons, who took the photo of the zip-tied had in a Winnipeg Ikea store, was shopping for baby cribs with his wife before he came across the display.

“I laughed as soon as I saw it, because my immediate thought was to put its middle finger up,” he told Insider. He took a photo and posted it on the subreddit.

Perrine Marion, who works at an Ikea in Brest, France, thought the picture was funny and said his store should do the same.

“Sometimes at the end of the day you discover a field of middle fingers,” Marion told Insider. “Usually, we don’t see people do it, but when we do, we laugh it off.”

On the Reddit thread discussing the photo, one person who identified themselves as an Ikea employee said that employees at their store were discouraged from modifying the product in any way that would prevent the customers from fully experiencing the product, while others said the problem of people using the model hands to flip people off was a widespread nuisance.

“It’s usually teenagers doing this for fun so yeah not the worst thing ever,” Marion said.