October 14, 2007
Maximizing Your Patio’s Potential with Outdoor Furniture Plans
At last, you finished that patio and pool out back, the cumulation of more than a year’s hard work. While the pool’s functional and still great fun, you don’t have any reclining chairs to sunbathe on, and that patio doesn’t seem very useful without some tables and something to sit on. For many newly completed outdoor improvement projects, they need to be filled up with furniture to vastly increase the level of enjoyment and use you can receive from them. However, even the best estimates can end poorly if too much or too little room is allotted for furniture. Therefore, it would be a wise decision to draw up some outdoor furniture plans to maximize your outdoor space’s potential.
Just Take a Few Minutes
A few minutes really can mean the difference between optimizing the room you have outside or paying a thousand dollars too much when you find out that there’s not enough room for all the furniture you bought. Drawing up outdoor furniture plans is actually quite simple. Take the measurements of whatever outdoor area you want to put furniture in, leave a foot or so around the edges as to not create a cramped feeling, and leave four to five foot wide passageways for walking. When drawing up plans, get a general idea about which furniture you’d like to purchase. This will also help you in the design process when you can take both room and furniture into consideration.
What about Holidays and other Parties?
Some holidays, such as the Fourth of July in the United States, are very popular for large groups of people to get together. If your patio or balcony is large enough to accommodate a good number of friends and family, then you might want to consider purchasing a few flower pots or other aesthetic items in your outdoor furniture plans to take up room and create a classier atmosphere for everyday use. However, if you plan on inviting friends over, then you should still buy enough furniture to fill up the space, but you can keep that furniture in storage until it’s needed.
Taking a few minutes to draw up outdoor furniture plans can be the difference between complete happiness with the end results of your work or being dissatisfied. Also, a few minutes can save you hundreds or even thousands of dollars when you realize that you might have bought furniture that you couldn’t use, or you don’t like the furniture you did buy, and you end up buying replacement furniture anyway. After all the work you’ve put into making your patio or balcony a success, you owe it to yourself to take a few minutes to optimize that space with outdoor furniture plans.
Filed under Outdoor Decor by Pat

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