4 Techniques to Help You Design An Outdoor Living Space

It only takes a few techniques to design an outdoor living space, you can implement to assist your customers or to create your very own masterwork. These strategies will help your sales staff provide excellent customer service, as well as, add value to the sale of furnture for your customers and will also help an individual design their outdoor space. This is a terrific way to increase customer loyalty and encourage word of mouth marketing to future customers.
# 1
If you are designing a big space the best way to handle this area is to divide the room into multiple comfortable furniture groupings to create an inviting and relaxed ambiance.

# 2
To warm up a space, utilize color by painting a wall with a dark shade, and you can hang drapery panels to produce a mood of closeness and warmth but make certain to allow natural light to seep into the space.

# 3
Select a focal point to showcase either a piece of furniture that you would deem a statement piece or a piece of artwork that personalizes the area.

# 4
Choose fabrics that are in agreement with one another, and then add colorful accent pillows and rugs. Or feature an interesting pattern on a minor accent furniture piece.

These are all easy suggestions to help design an outdoor space. Try using them the next time you help a customer design their outside living area.
For more ideas write a comment or email me at mblake@outdoorinteriors.com
These are my outside views… Marcia Blake
Daovue commented:
I've got a seirous hankerin' for olives now, but not the slimy alien kind. That would be icky. great as always!
Alexander commented:
We have owned two of these chrais for just over a week now, and we love them. Everyone who has seen them seems to like the chrais too. They are made of solid wood a plus in today's furniture market. The wood has subtle grains and is a nice honey color. The chrais are heavier than I expected, but also shorter than we had guessed (the back probably stands 3-4 inches shorter than your standard dining room chair). They appear to be made in Vietnam. The assembly was simple (only six bolts) and the chrais went together in no time. My wife had both assembled in less than 15 minutes. When putting the chrais together, I recommend that you tighten the bolts as you would lug nuts on a tire namely, don't fully cinch one down until all of the bolts are snug. The first chair was a little wobbly when first put together, which I think was a result of trying to fully tighten one of the bolts before the rest were in place. It was a quick fix, however; all we did was snug-tighten each bolt and then once that was done, we cinched each one. Having learned that, the second chair came together well and both do not have any wobble to them. The chrais are attractive enough that we are using them inside the house for extra seating. I am not sure how they would hold up outside under the elements. My guess is not as well as something more expensive such as teak, but would still do fairly well outside. Overall, we are very pleased with the purchase.
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