Exterior Door: Luxury on the lawn
Outdoors is going upscale across United States
America is moving out.
We’re creating outdoor spaces with all the comforts of indoors, right down to the area rugs and chandeliers. Thank modern materials for that — and quite possibly, the high cost of housing.
“Americans are looking outdoors and saying, ‘Hey, I have a lot more room than I thought I had,’ ” said P. Allen Smith, a garden designer who has both a TV show and a book titled “P. Allen Smith’s Garden Home.”
Creating a garden room, those homeowners reason, is a lot less expensive than adding on, or pulling up stakes. And with expansive choices and opportunities for customization, “you can get the same level of design detail for the exterior” as you could for the interior, he said.
Clearly, we’re past the day when unfolding a few lawn chairs on a concrete patio passes for outdoor living.
“Homeowners want the exterior spaces to reflect their style, just like their interior,” said Mary Eitel, who presented a survey on outdoor living preferences for Laneventure, a manufacturer of upscale outdoor furniture, at April’s International Home Furnishings Market in High Point, N.C. Home decor ranked with clothing as the primary ways the survey
respondents expressed their personal style, and 61 percent considered it important to extend the personality of their homes to the outdoors.
Manufacturers are listening. They’re producing fashionable furniture and accessories that encourage us to take our leisure time outdoors, whether it’s to gather with friends, share a meal, read a book or catch a nap.
They’re also giving us choices. Laneventure, for example, recently partnered with Sherwin-Williams to offer a whopping 814 colors for its outdoor furniture frames, so homeowners can precisely match their patio furniture to, say, their shutters, company spokeswoman Sheryl King said.
Geared to comfort
One of the biggest trends of late has been toward modular gazebos, tentlike structures that can be erected when the weather warms or the need arises. They provide a cozy sense of enclosure in the expansive outdoors — an important consideration in creating a garden room, Smith said.
Typically they’re constructed of a metal frame with a canopy made of a weather-resistant fabric. Many have curtains to block the sun, or either screens or netting panels to shut out insects.
These temporary shelters have trickled to the mass market, so they’re widely available at discount stores and home centers. Home Depot, for example, carries several gazebos, including a generous 12-by-10-foot model for $399.
Comfort also is big in the outdoor-furniture business, which explains why cushioned furniture is making a comeback, said Susan Dovel, patio manager for B&G Fireplace and Patio in Jackson Township. Technology has helped in that regard: Advanced filling materials and better cushion design allow seat cushions to dry faster, and acrylic outdoor fabrics and trims have been refined to the point where they can be as soft and lavish as their indoor counterparts. Customers have been known to run their hands over the chenille cushions on display in the B&G showroom and say, “You mean I can have that?” Dovel said.
High-tech materials
Yes, those to-die-for fabrics are really diehards, able to stand up to sun, rain and cleaning products. Case in point: Allen and his staff once submerged samples of Sunbrella outdoor fabric and a standard cotton-acrylic blend in containers of undiluted chlorine bleach for three months. The blend dissolved, he said. The Sunbrella didn’t change.
As a result of those advances, furniture forms that mimic indoor styles are becoming increasingly popular. Instead of the traditional table-umbrella-chair sets, many consumers are opting for a cushioned love seat and a couple of deep armchairs cozied up to a coffee table, just like they might have in the family room.
Outdoor wicker remains one of the favorite styles for cushioned seating, Dovel said — particularly in the Midwest, where tastes lean toward the traditional.
Most outdoor wicker is woven from resin strands on aluminum frames, although one top manufacturer, Lloyd/Flanders, uses a twisted fiber made from kraft paper that’s protected by a weather-resistant coating. That process creates a wicker that’s close in appearance and feel to traditional rattan.
But wicker is hardly the only choice. Cushioned furniture comes in a range of frame styles, from sleek stainless steel to elegant carved teak.
Still, even the most advanced cushions can’t dry as quickly as sling chairs — chairs made of a polyester-based fabric stretched taut over a metal frame, with just enough give for comfort. That’s why sling furniture is the biggest seller at The Great Escape, a new leisure furniture store in Missouri, owner Michael Cortina said.
Going to new heights
Better manufacturers are paying attention to ergonomics, Cortina said, building in features such as lumbar supports to make sling chairs more comfortable.
Those chairs, whether sling or cushioned, aren’t necessarily being drawn up to a traditional patio table designed for dining. The trend is toward conversation or chat sets — chairs grouped around a lower, cocktail-height table just right for holding drinks and hors d’oeuvres.
Some of those tables have depressions in the center designed for building small fires. They’re a big selling feature for midpriced patio sets this year, but Cortina said his store hasn’t sold many. Dovel said she fears the lower-quality steel from which some are made will deteriorate quickly.
Counter-height “gathering tables” are another option that’s moving outdoors. Those higher tables and chairs allow people who are seated to interact at eye level with others who are standing — an ideal setup for entertaining, said Bob Ryan, a sales representative for upscale outdoor-furniture maker Brown Jordan. The higher chairs are easier to get in and out of, he noted, which make them a good choice for less agile buyers.
Patio table shift
The look of patio tables is changing, too. Glass table tops are falling out of favor, replaced by materials including plastic laminate, all-weather wicker and resin fashioned to mimic such substances as hand-cut stone, tile and slate. A tabletop from Winston, a division of Brown Jordan, is made of granite set into resin to allow for expansion and contraction without cracking, Dovel said.
Perhaps the features that are really making outdoor furnishings feel homelike, however, are the accessories. Throw pillows, lamps and area rugs made for outdoor use are almost indistinguishable from indoor types, particularly at higher price levels.
But even at the mass merchandisers, you can find accessories that allow you to put your own stamp on your garden room. Target, for example, sells an outdoor chandelier for $129.99 that adds an unexpected touch of elegance over a table or seating group. Home Depot has outdoor throw pillows in a variety of patterns and colors, from tropical stripes to classic florals. Outdoor area rugs are widely available, although the less expensive choices tend not to match the softness of pricier options.
They all add up to outdoor spaces that are as welcoming and comfortable as the rooms inside our homes — rooms we want to stay in, at least while summer lasts.
How outdoor furniture fares
All outdoor furniture looks good in the store. But how good it looks after a year on your deck depends on what it’s made of and how it’s made.
Here’s some guidance on what to look for and what you can expect to find at various quality levels.
In the lowest price ranges ($300 or less for a five-piece table-and-chairs set), it’s hard to find pieces that can stand up to the outdoors for long. Steel frames are typical, but you’ll need to touch up scratches and dings with paint periodically to prevent rust.
Inexpensive molded plastic furniture continues to be a popular low-cost choice, and it’s now available in Adirondack chairs.
Go with aluminum frames if you can find them, because they won’t rust the way steel will — but make sure the frames are sturdy.
Outdoor accessories
Accessorizing an outdoor living area used to be pretty much limited to color-coordinating your citronella candles.
But my, how times have changed.
Manufacturers have taken the term “outdoor room” literally, creating decorative accessories and other items that make outdoor spaces just as beautiful and livable as indoor rooms. Here are some of the goodies we’ve found:
Outdoor lighting: Table lamps, floor lamps and chandeliers designed for outdoor use look almost identical to indoor versions, with shades made of weather-resistant fabrics. One table lamp we liked, made by Catalina Lighting, is designed to fit into the umbrella hole of a patio table and has a clamp that holds it in place, even in the wind.
Umbrellas: Sure, you can buy an umbrella big enough to shade a table. But what about one that’s big enough to shade an entire deck or hot tub?
A number of manufacturers are making 11-foot-wide, cantilevered umbrellas that swivel and tilt in any direction you want.
Another cool umbrella option is Hampton Bay’s solar-powered version. This 9-foot umbrella has four solar panels to soak up the sun’s energy and provide up to four hours’ worth of power to the white lights that twinkle on the spokes at night. The umbrella is being sold exclusively to Home Depot stores.
Storage ottomans: These little stools can prop up your feet, hold a tray of drinks or serve as extra seating, and their lift-off lids reveal space for storage. Pier One has storage stools that come with either a green, blue or violet cushion to match its rocking director’s chairs.
Rugs: While outdoor area rugs are becoming more popular, many aren’t all that soft underfoot. One exception is Tyndall Creek Furniture Co.’s plush polypropylene rugs. They resist mildew and fading, and they come in stripes, tweeds and solid colors with contrasting borders. Names of dealers can be found at www.tyndallcreek.com.
Heaters: Propane-powered patio heaters warm up a chilly evening and extend the season for those of us in colder climates. The propane tank is hidden in the bottom of the unit, but the heating element is overhead, out of harm’s way.
One unusual variation is the All Season’s Table from O.W. Lee Co., which puts the patio heater in the center of a 54-inch round, wrought-iron table with a top made of tumbled-stone mosaic, granite or faux stone. The heater can be replaced with an umbrella in the warmer months. Find dealers at www.owlee.com.
