YEAH! Rentals

YEAH! Rentals YEAH! rentals is a LA / SF & Palm Springs based furniture and props rental house specializing in mid century modern, industrial & cosmic desert design

Sarah J Davis you know how to take an amazing photo thank you
04/30/2026

Sarah J Davis you know how to take an amazing photo thank you

We just got back from Coachella and couldn’t stop noticing how bad most poolside setups feel. Not because people don’t c...
04/19/2026

We just got back from Coachella and couldn’t stop noticing how bad most poolside setups feel. Not because people don’t care, but because most of us are working with what we have. A few chairs, maybe a couple loungers. Enough for daily life, not enough to create a moment.

Los Resort restores pieces from Brown Jordan, Tropitone, and other iconic outdoor makers from a time when leisure actually meant something. You can feel it in the design. These pieces have already lived a life, and somehow still carry that energy. Bringing them into Yeah! Rentals isn’t just about furniture. It’s about giving people access to a feeling they don’t normally have at home.

And here’s where it shifts. We can rework everything. Strap colors, powder coat, full palette control. We’ve already been doing this for clients, but now it lives inside pieces that actually matter. If the whole event is pink, the furniture is pink. If the world is green, it all lines up. Custom usually feels expensive. This takes the edge off.

Same pool. Same people. Completely different experience.

Something curious has been happening over here…A few walls quietly moved. A few new characters showed up. Some old favor...
03/11/2026

Something curious has been happening over here…
A few walls quietly moved. A few new characters showed up. Some old favorites suddenly have a lot more breathing room. And somewhere in the middle of it all, a whole new way of peeking inside appeared… though we haven’t exactly said the words out loud yet.

Let’s just say the playground got bigger, the toy box got heavier, and there may or may not be a new front door.

Care to guess what’s going on?

If you correctly guess all three things I’m hinting at… you might win something… or at the very least eternal bragging rights… 👀

The Other Art Fair Los AngelesYeah! Rentals will be there, which means that after you’ve politely nodded at seventeen la...
02/27/2026

The Other Art Fair Los Angeles

Yeah! Rentals will be there, which means that after you’ve politely nodded at seventeen large abstract paintings and one sculpture that looks like it survived a small electrical fire, you can collapse onto an actually beautiful couch and reconsider your entire life. Not a folding chair. Not a tragic cube. A real couch. The kind that suggests you have taste and possibly opinions about Scandinavian design. And here’s the twist: once you sit down, you are no longer just a tired person clutching a tote bag and a lukewarm canned cocktail. You are now part of the installation. Congratulations. You came to look at art and accidentally became it.

There’s something happening in Los Angeles this weekend that feels less like an art fair and more like a living, breathing creative ecosystem. The Other Art Fair isn’t about whispering through white walls pretending to understand everything. It’s about stepping directly into the creative scene — meeting artists face to face, wandering into interactive installations, bumping into experimental elements and performance moments that feel slightly unhinged in the best way. It’s curious. It’s alive. And in a time when so much of our experience is filtered through screens, this is your gentle shove out the front door. Go wander. Go get surprised. Go sit on a very good couch and become part of the story.

Now if you’ve read this whole thing, we’ve got a free ticket for you. But you’ve got to slide into our DMs and tell us what day you want to go. We only have a few, so be serious about this.

Before There Is Change, There Is a SeatEvery revolution, every board meeting in a borrowed space, every debate that actu...
02/20/2026

Before There Is Change, There Is a Seat

Every revolution, every board meeting in a borrowed space, every debate that actually shifts something begins the same way. Someone sits down.

History remembers the speech. The dramatic exit. The quote that ends up framed in a hallway. It rarely mentions who arranged the seating, which is funny, because one bad placement and suddenly two sworn enemies are sharing armrests.

People sit down because they’re willing to stay. Staying is where the uncomfortable sentences live.

When we say, “If you have the meeting, we have the chairs,” it sounds simple. Like something printed on a tote bag. But these aren’t folding chairs with a slight emotional wobble. These are high-end, intentional, beautifully designed pieces that make you feel like you should probably organize your thoughts before speaking.

Furniture has a personality. A cheap chair says let’s get this over with. A good chair says this might matter.

It’s hard to launch a startup in an empty warehouse, host a town hall in a field, or stage a debate in a space that didn’t exist yesterday without something solid for people to sit in. Stability helps. It’s difficult to reconsider your worldview while bracing your core muscles.

Before there’s a headline or someone storms out or anything officially changes, someone has to claim a room, arrange it, decide where people will face each other, and trust that they’re willing to stay once they sit down.

All we do is make sure that part doesn’t feel accidental.

If you have the meeting, we have the chairs.

And if you’re brave enough to host the conversation, we’ll make sure the furniture doesn’t embarrass you.

We run a 10,000 square foot furniture warehouse in Los Angeles. The catalog moves through festivals, brand activations, ...
01/28/2026

We run a 10,000 square foot furniture warehouse in Los Angeles. The catalog moves through festivals, brand activations, and cultural moments like Coachella, which may or may not still be cultural but is definitely a place where things get tested. The catalog doesn’t stay still. Pieces come in. Pieces go out. Some get sold. Some get rebuilt. Some disappear because they’ve done enough.

The fun part isn’t the inventory. It’s the search. Finding pieces that work hard, feel right, and haven’t already been everywhere. If you look at the site, you might not immediately know what something is. Vintage. Designer. Flea market. Something we built because nothing else worked. Usually more than one of those is true. We don’t label it loudly because it doesn’t matter. If it fits without explanation, it fits.

We don’t buy the flimsy, shiny, looks-good-online furniture. If it feels disposable, it usually is. We’d rather have fewer pieces that survive real use than a warehouse full of things that look tired halfway through a weekend. A lot of what we know comes from the field. Long days. Early mornings. Dust everywhere. Watching furniture get used nonstop, then packed up and disappear again. If a piece survives a festival weekend and still looks good at sunset, it earns its place.

Closer to the event, creativity gives way to logistics. Delivery. Load-in. Install. When that part is done right, it feels almost boring. Things arrive when they should. Adjustments happen quietly. The space comes together without drama. That calm isn’t an accident. It comes from starting early and letting decisions settle.

At the end of the day, this isn’t really about furniture. It’s about paying attention.
Ok bye

Los Angeles friends, artists, curators, producers, and people who make temporary magic…                            Hi, I...
01/15/2026

Los Angeles friends, artists, curators, producers, and people who make temporary magic…
Hi, I’m Joe McKee.

I’m one of the people behind Solid Art Services and YEAH! Rentals.

There are a lot of art fairs, pop-ups, shows, and temporary exhibitions coming up across Los Angeles soon. Some of you we’re already working with. Some of you we’ve worked with before. And some of you we haven’t met yet… but we probably have mutual friends.

The reason these two companies exist, and why they work so closely together, is pretty simple. Art deserves to be handled with care, and the environment around it should feel just as intentional.

At Solid, we take care of the artwork itself. How it arrives. How it’s installed. How it’s protected.

At YEAH!, we take care of the space people experience the work in. Furniture, layout, pacing, places to sit, gather, pause, and actually spend time with the art.

If you’re producing an art show, participating in or (or any other art fairs around that time), or creating an event… we’re here.

If we’re already working together, thank you.
If we haven’t yet, hello. I’d love to connect.

Joe
If this is for you, DM us.
If this is for a friend, send it to them.
If you prefer email, phone calls, smoke signals, or carrier pigeons, we’re flexible.

And if none of this applies to you, thanks for reading anyway. The internet is a strange place, and it helps when we pass notes to each other.

Quick reality check, LA…We’re already filming this.This isn’t a “maybe” or a vibe post.The cameras are rolling and the e...
12/16/2025

Quick reality check, LA…

We’re already filming this.
This isn’t a “maybe” or a vibe post.
The cameras are rolling and the edits are happening.

What we’re doing is simple: documenting where 2026 is actually headed — through the voices of people who are paying attention, not performing.

And if you’ve been hesitating because you think you need a bold take or some perfectly formed idea… you don’t.

Most of the best moments come from people saying,
“I’ve been noticing this thing…”
or
“I don’t fully know yet, but something’s shifting…”

That’s the point.

This is real content, not a thought-leadership costume.
We’ll guide you.
We’ll edit it well.
You just show up as yourself and talk honestly.

LA area only.
Studios, homes, offices — wherever you are.

Dates:
Dec 19–22 … studio
Dec 22–23 … we come to you

If you’ve been waiting for a sign instead of a perfect sentence… this is it.

And if you’re not the one, please share it with someone who is.
Quiet observers. Pattern-noticers. People who see what’s coming but don’t shout about it.

Link in bio.

Love changes form. So does design.The Wiggle Chair has always stayed with me because it wasn’t really about cardboard. I...
12/07/2025

Love changes form. So does design.

The Wiggle Chair has always stayed with me because it wasn’t really about cardboard. It was about possibility. Someone looked at one of the simplest materials and asked what would happen if it became art people could actually use. Not just something to look at, but something you could sit on. Touch. Gather around. A chair that lives in a room and quietly changes how you feel inside that space.

Every chair carries moments. It holds conversation. It becomes the place you rest. The spot where you wait. The seat where you listen. When something is made with intention, it stops being just furniture and becomes part of the emotional landscape of a room. Art doesn’t feel separate anymore. It becomes part of daily life.

Frank once said, “I like to challenge the rules and see how far you can go.” That feels like a reminder that art doesn’t have to stay on the wall. It can be lived with. Sat on. Shared. It can meet people where they are instead of being something they admire from a distance.

And I always come back to what Mr. Rogers taught us, that “what we see and hear on the screen is part of who we become.” I think the same is true for the spaces and objects we surround ourselves with. They shape how we feel, how we connect, and how safe we feel to just be ourselves. When art enters everyday life, it doesn’t just decorate our world… it quietly helps us see each other more clearly.

A couple weeks ago I was at the women’s soccer championship in San Jose bouncing between off-site pop-ups, podcast activ...
12/03/2025

A couple weeks ago I was at the women’s soccer championship in San Jose bouncing between off-site pop-ups, podcast activations, and brand moments circling the game.

Let me be clear… the on-site stadium activations had VIP lounges and shockingly those worked. People sat down. They talked. They didn’t flee like startled deer.

Then you stepped into the off-site activations and chairs became an endangered species.

No hangout zones.
No lounging.
No resting.
Just a lot of very motivated standing.

Everything was built for speed… step in, snap the photo, grab the free thing, move along… like an emotional TSA checkpoint. I get the logic, but the result is everyone looking slightly tired, holding drinks and phones, with the same face you make standing in line at the DMV.

At one sponsored after-party the room was packed… still no seating. People rolled through and left fast because there was nowhere to land. The only humans who stayed found this tiny stretch of cement wall, perfectly seat-height, and parked themselves there. They were the first ones in and literally the last ones out. Because chairs are magic. And yes… there were superstars in the room. Even celebrities like to sit.

This pattern is everywhere. The only packed zones at conferences and festivals are the seating corners and phone charging spots. Because sitting isn’t about foot pain… it’s about nervous system relief.

When we sit, we soften. We stop performing. Conversations stretch longer. People remember how to be human instead of brand-adjacent.

Libraries work for a reason.
Coffee shops work for a reason.
Living rooms do heroic emotional labor.

It isn’t decor… it’s permission to stay.

Lounge environments aren’t luxury… they’re the missing ingredient. Not banquet seating. Not plastic chairs lined in rows. Real spaces for conversation and calm that quietly say you don’t have to keep moving.

I could start writing really good brand activation ideas centered on this human need for connection and comfort… would you want that?

Because the best VIP perk isn’t access.

It’s dignity, comfort, and somewhere to sit your tired human body.

Maybe that’s the off-site activation we’re all craving.

I watched this whole CNN segment about how weddings are getting more expensive because of tariffs. The anchor listed eve...
11/19/2025

I watched this whole CNN segment about how weddings are getting more expensive because of tariffs. The anchor listed everything like it was written in stone. Flowers flown in from foreign countries. Vanilla from Madagascar. Dresses from Taiwan or China. Champagne from France with a fifteen percent tariff. And the message was basically good luck out there. No alternatives. No imagination. Nothing that empowers anyone to think differently.

And I found myself thinking really. Are weddings supposed to begin in a cargo hold somewhere over the Pacific. Is this the actual vision. Do we have to play by those rules. Or are we just accepting what we’re told without asking a better question.

Because you could simply wed. You could eat food made by people in your own city. No tariff on that. They cook with what grows around them. And you could choose flowers grown close enough to touch instead of flown over your head.

Maybe I am wrong. Maybe I do not know. But if you want to avoid a tariff you can just not import everything.

And the decor conversation gets even stranger. You can feel the cardboard shipping boxes when you scroll through certain sites. Wouldn’t it be interesting if weddings were built from things made intentionally and curated thoughtfully by actual humans living in your region.

This is not a manifesto. It is just a reminder that weddings can be rooted in place instead of panic. If tariffs are the problem the solution might be choosing things that never had to cross a border in the first place.

So down below add yourself. Florists caterers bakers dressmakers rental houses designers ceramicists candlemakers letterpress studios anyone who creates from what is around them instead of what flies above them.

If you belong here put your info.
If you have something to add say it.
If you are tired of being told weddings only exist inside global logistics join in.

And yes this was written by some guy who gets frustrated by stupid news.

Address

Los Angeles, CA

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 5pm
Tuesday 10am - 5pm
Wednesday 10am - 5pm
Thursday 10am - 5pm
Friday 10am - 5pm

Telephone

+13236126128

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