Once you have finished making your patio, your deck or your lawn, you will unquestionably start thinking about how you can enjoy more time outside. Therefore, you will have to have some garden furniture. Many shops sell garden furniture. You can try home improvement centres, large department stores and garden centres. There are also businesses on line that will deliver. The hard part is picking your garden furniture.

There is a very broad choice of designs of garden furniture - a design to suit every person and complement every garden. So, before hurrying down to the garden centre, it is worth considering for a while what you would like to accomplish with your open-air seating area. Do you require a theme? Do you want to have company or dine there? Or do you just want to sit quietly, enjoy your garden and read a book?

Indeed, the answer may well be a combination of all those variables. If you simply want to sit there with a drink and a book, you may be satisfied to just buy a couple of chairs and a small table, but if you want to have guests or take family meals outside, you may prefer a more substantial table. A large oak table would be quite costly, but it would look magnificent and last for a decade or more.

If you choose a table, you will have to have chairs to match, but do you want loungers as well? They could be of plastic and kept in the shed until required.

You will likely need some form of shade. This can be provided by folding, even removable umbrellas or by overhanging trees or shrubs. Wisteria or clematis can do the task as well and cost you almost nothing.

Do you intend cooking in this space? If you do, what and how? Do you want a barbecue pit or a real hob and oven? A lot of people in areas where the climate permits are doing a lot of cooking outdoors in a carbon copy of an indoor kitchen, but without all the walls.. If you plan the outdoor kitchen well, you will be able to use it in the rain too. I find it great not to have kitchen odours in the house and cooking out of doors is a good experience as well.

If it gets nippy in the evenings then you can consider getting some patio heaters. They are not expensive to buy or to run and one standard patio heater can keep quite a crowd of people warm. (By the word ’standard’ here, I mean upright, like a lamp post).

Lighting is the last major consideration on the list when deciding on garden furniture. There are actually two sorts of garden lighting to consider: lighting to see by and lighting to lure insects away. Again, you could use standard lamps to illuminate your patio. They cast their light far enough so that you can still look at your garden after dusk or you could have individual wall light on dimmers.

The one light I would categorically have is a mosquito lantern. Hang this away from where you sit, because they do attract insects to them which they then electrocute with a gratifying zap.

Owen Jones, the author of this article writes on a number of subjects, but is at present concerned with visual comfort lighting. If you would like to know more or check out some great offers, please go to our website at Outdoor Wall Lamps.

Leave a Reply