Up to 18% discount Sitewide
Ends: 1+ month
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Online deals are nothing new. Most of us have grown used to browsing internet storefronts that scream in capital letters about "MASSIVE SAVINGS" and countdown timers hinting that this is your last chance to grab a discount that, if we're honest, will probably be back in a week under a…Online deals are nothing new. Most of us have grown used to browsing internet storefronts that scream in capital letters…
Ends: 1+ month
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
These may still work, so give them a try if you're still looking for a working promo code.
× Expired on: 12th May
× Expired on: 20th June
× Expired on: 10th June
× Expired on: 17th June
× Expired on: 21st April
Online deals are nothing new. Most of us have grown used to browsing internet storefronts that scream in capital letters about "MASSIVE SAVINGS" and countdown timers hinting that this is your last chance to grab a discount that, if we're honest, will probably be back in a week under a slightly different promotional slogan. Still, amid the noise and marketing déjà vu, there are occasional deals worth your attention - not necessarily life-changing, but quietly satisfying. Like restocking a drawer with adult-quality tea towels, or replacing a clattery old extractor hood with something that doesn’t audibly resent being switched on.
At first glance, the current "15% OFF SHOPWIDE" event at this home and kitchen-focused e-commerce site is doing its best to be urgent, complete with a countdown clock ticking anxiously in the corner. You could ignore it - but if you're eyeballing a compact wine fridge or a sleek extractor hood in stainless steel and don’t mind adding "FLORA15" at checkout, knocking off a bit of the total makes sense. Especially now that the fridge hums louder than your conversations and summer is hinting at a return.
Product selection leans helpfully domestic: ice cube makers (many of them, in fact), extractor hoods, grills, modestly stylised fireplaces, and every variation of ice cream machine short of artisanal dairy sourcing. Some items are deeply functional; others give off a distinct whiff of seasonal buyer’s impulse. The site also features periodic "B-Stock" items - lightly used or cosmetically imperfect units often priced enticingly lower. Returns are accepted within a 14-day cooling-off period, so if your purchase feels less essential after caffeine and contemplation, recovery is built in.
The Eiszeit Crush Ice Cube Machine (£357.99) is aggressively niche but oddly compelling, if only because its name sounds like an eccentric synthpop album. It sports a clear design mission: generate crushed ice relentlessly, presumably for those who believe texture makes or breaks a summer drink. There’s something quietly noble about a device built to do one job with singular focus. Whether it's a household essential is another question, but it might be the technologist’s equivalent of a deckchair: unnecessary but weirdly comforting.
For less ceremonial purchases, the ShirtButler Drying and Ironing Device (£82.99) wants to streamline your laundry routine. It’s not the shortcut to crisp tailoring the name implies, but for casual wrinkle reduction, it's satisfying in a quiet, robot-adjacent sort of way - like a clumsy valet brought to you by small-scale convection.
Delivery is standardised and modest unless you’re ordering something that could plausibly be used to spit-roast a whole animal (yes, that’s available too - the Sauenland Pro XL Grill, £684.99). There’s a £10 voucher for first-time newsletter subscribers (usable on orders over £100 and combinable with other codes except those of the blanket discount variety). No surprises in the terms. No overly complicated fine print. Just enough friction to discourage serial returners.
The "Hello Spring" sale includes modest discounts on outdoor gear: fire bowls, barbecues, and oddly poetic products like the "Monument Garden Fireplace" (£131.99), which sounds like something an interior monologue might pass through. If your garden hosts more hedgehogs than dinner parties, you may not need an articulated flame structure named like a municipal statue - but it’s there if you're ready.
In a world increasingly pitched to us via lifestyle aspiration and algorithmic nudging, it’s refreshing - or at least grounding - to encounter a coupon site that doesn’t entirely pretend its deals will change your life. Nothing here is solving world hunger. But you might come away with an ice maker that's more consistent than your freezer or an extractor hood that doesn’t buzz like a Vespa on gravel. When paired with a discount code and a little pragmatism, that’s not nothing.
Just remember: sales end. Your taste in kitchen hardware is forever. Or at least until the next 48-hour event.
Last updated:
⭐ Rating: 4.9 / 5 (42 votes)