How I Bring the Warmth of Interiors to Outdoor Living Spaces
Most of us don't think about our outdoor spaces the way we think about our interiors. We furnish a living room with real intention—layering materials, considering proportion, and building the space around a curated palette. There’s something truly special about approaching the design of our outdoor living spaces with just as much care. Once you give yourself permission to treat your patio, terrace, or garden as a true room, a place where life is meant to be experienced, everything changes. Here are six designer tips on creating outdoor living spaces that feel like home.1. Anchor the Space Like You Would Any Room
Every well-designed interior begins with an anchor—a piece or a moment that establishes the scale and tone for everything else. Outdoors, that anchor is almost always the table, whether it's a dining table for long summer evenings or a coffee table that organizes a lounge seating arrangement. Choose a durable material with genuine presence: stone, concrete, teak, or quality fiberglass that reads like stone. The right table doesn't just hold things; it grounds the entire space and gives everything around it a reason to be there.
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2. Build Your Palette Before You Buy a Single Piece
This is the step many people skip, and it's the one that makes the greatest difference. Before selecting any furniture or textiles, identify the color story you want to tell. For outdoor spaces, I almost always work within warm tones reminiscent of nature. Think limestone creams, sun-baked terracottas, rich browns, and quiet olive greens. These are colors that read as inevitable in an outdoor context, as if they emerged from the landscape rather than being placed on top of it. Once you have that palette in mind, every decision you make becomes that much easier and more coherent.
3. Choose Seating That Earns Its Place
Look for outdoor seating with the same care you'd bring to an indoor sofa or armchair. Consider the shape, whether it’s a classic chaise lounge or a dining chair with curved details that reward a second look. Explore your upholstery options, and stick to performance materials! Performance fabrics have come a long way, and there's no longer any reason to sacrifice texture or warmth for durability. Pieces that look like they belong inside and simply happen to be outside are the ones that make outdoor living spaces feel like an extension of home.4. Think About Light and Enclosure
One of the things Florence taught me is that the most beautiful outdoor spaces have a quality of intimacy. They feel contained—not closed off, but held. You can create that feeling with an overhead element: a rattan chandelier above a dining table on a covered porch, a market umbrella positioned not just for shade but for proportion, or a string of warm lights that define the ceiling of an open-air space. When you give a space a sense of enclosure, you make it feel like a true room… and that’s exactly what we're after!Shop Outdoor Pool Furniture & Décor
5. Layer Textiles the Way You Would Indoors
Outdoor pillows and throw blankets are where a space goes from furnished to designed. Layer pillows on each seat, mixing scales and prints while keeping everything within the same tonal family—a larger square pillow paired with a lumbar pillow, and perhaps a subtle pattern alongside solid fabrics. The goal is not a matched set but a collected feeling, as if the pieces have been gathered over time from places that mean something to you.

























