Choosing garden furniture is less about picking the prettiest set in a brochure and more about matching pieces to the way your outdoor space already works. A south facing patio that catches the late afternoon sun calls for something different to a sheltered side return where you read with a coffee. The first question to ask is simple: what do you want to do out there, and how often do you want to do it?
Once that is clear, the rest of the decisions become easier. Materials, shapes and sizes all start to point in the same direction, and the result feels like part of the home rather than a showroom display dropped onto the lawn.
Most regrets with garden furniture come down to scale. A generous corner sofa can swallow a small terrace, while a slim bistro pair can look lost on a wider lawn. Sketch the patio or decking, mark out doorways, paths and planters, and leave room to walk around chairs once they are pulled out. A clearance of around sixty centimetres behind a chair is a comfortable working number for most layouts.
If you are unsure where to begin, browse our full range of outdoor garden furniture and use the dimensions on each product page as a sanity check against the space you have measured.
People settle outside in different ways. Some homes lean towards long evening meals, others towards reading, sunbathing or hosting friends for drinks. A few well chosen pieces tend to outperform a single oversized set. A pair of outdoor garden armchairs with a small drinks table is enough for a calm corner, while a dining set takes the lead if your garden is the natural place for weekend lunches.
For a more relaxed feel, a low garden coffee table sits well between two armchairs or in front of a corner sofa, and gives you a useful surface for trays, books and candles without crowding the space.
UK gardens deal with damp, salt in coastal areas, and wide swings in temperature through the year. Powder coated aluminium and synthetic rattan are easy modern choices because they cope with all of that and stay light enough to rearrange. Acacia and eucalyptus hardwoods bring warmth and texture, and they age into a soft silver grey if left untreated, or hold their original tone when oiled lightly each spring.
For cushions, water repellent fabrics with quick drying foam are ideal, especially on pieces that sit in the open. Removable covers make the laundry side of life much simpler when the pollen season arrives.
It helps to think of the garden in zones rather than as a single empty area. A dining zone near the kitchen door, a lounging zone in the warmest corner, and a quieter spot under a tree or pergola each call for different shapes. Coordinated garden seating sets work well for the lounging zone, while standalone chairs and a slim bench can mark the third area without making it feel staged.
Keep the colour palette restrained. Two or three tones across frames, cushions and accessories will read as calm and considered, while too many competing finishes can feel busy in a small space.
British homes rarely have endless storage, so think about where cushions and lighter pieces will live during the wettest weeks. Storage boxes that double as benches are useful, and stackable chairs free up corners over winter. Heavier dining tables and sofas can stay outside under breathable covers, and they will appreciate a quick wipe down at the start and end of the season.
When you are ready to put it all together, our team at Furniture in Fashion can help you compare collections side by side, with free UK delivery on every outdoor order.
The garden is an extension of the rooms inside, so it is worth letting your interior style guide the outdoor one. A calm, modern living room with linen sofas and warm timber will sit happily next to a soft grey rattan set with oak toned cushions. A sharper, more graphic interior pairs well with darker frames, slatted timber tops and crisp neutral fabrics. The aim is a quiet sense of continuity, not a perfect match.
How much space should I leave around a garden dining table?
Aim for around seventy five centimetres on each side so chairs can be pulled out without catching on planters or walls.
Can I mix materials in one garden?
Yes, mixing rattan with timber or aluminium often looks more natural than a fully matched set, as long as the colour palette stays calm.
Are modular pieces worth it for smaller gardens?
Modular sets are particularly useful in compact spaces because you can split them across two zones or reshape them when guests arrive.
What is the easiest material to live with?
Synthetic rattan over aluminium is one of the simplest options for British gardens, since it handles damp and sun without much attention.
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