Newsflash, old antique furniture from around that time is still really expensive even today. It was a hand-crafted specialty product, not run-of-the-mill IKEA stuff. If you compare the prices of single consumer goods while adjusting for inflation, they generally check out at least wrt. the overall ballpark. The difference is that living standards (and real incomes) back then for the average person were a lot lower.
Inflation is by definition the change in prices of a general basket of goods. Some things will outrun the basket and some things will underrun it. In general consumer durables have underrun, things like TVs and yes, sofas, are way way cheaper now than ever before. I'm not really sure why you would exclude IKEA type furniture, in most cases it's probably as good or better than a really old hand crafted one. If back then you needed to get an ultra luxury sofa but now you can get an IKEA one for the same general quality then that's a massive win for affordability even if the ultra luxury category still exists.