Outdoor teak lounge with dining chairs
Teak frames, pale cushions and a low, open profile set the tone from the first view. The outdoor teak lounge sits close to the ground, with rounded lines that keep the seating from feeling heavy. Instead of sharp joins, the pieces move in soft curves, so the wood reads as one continuous shape. Large beige outdoor cushions lift the arrangement without interrupting the grain of the teak, and the whole group feels made for long hours outside, from early light to late shade.
Lounging on the terrace by the water
The terrace places the outdoor teak lounge beside the pool, where the reflective surface changes the light around the furniture through the day. A pair of low coffee tables anchors the seating group, keeping glasses, books or small plates within reach without cluttering the layout. Behind it, the plaster wall and the dark-framed openings give the setting a clear edge. The furniture stays visual and calm: teak on stone, cushions against textured walls, and greenery at the perimeter.
From this angle, the collection reads as more than a single seating group. It forms an outdoor lounge collection that can expand into different uses across the day. One moment the space holds a casual conversation; another, it becomes a place to pause beside the water. The cushion volume is important here. The beige outdoor cushions soften the straight lines of the terrace and make the teak frames appear lighter than they are. Nothing is overworked. The eye moves from the wood structure to the fabric, then out to the garden.
Rounded organic forms in teak
Close up, the most noticeable detail is the joinery. The rounded organic forms are not decorative in themselves; they shape the silhouette and keep the edges smooth where the frame turns. That matters in a collection like this, where the material is doing the visual work. The teak surfaces are left visible, so the lines of the frame remain readable even when the cushions are in place. On the armrests and corners, the soft transitions make the furniture look drawn in one motion rather than assembled from separate parts.
That same approach gives the lounge pieces a measured presence. They do not rely on ornament, only on proportion, curve and material. The result is a set that can sit against a plastered wall, near a pool edge or under a shaded terrace without losing definition. The furniture keeps its shape in full sun and in shadow, because the outline is clear enough to hold from a distance and detailed enough to reward a closer look.
Beige cushions and the weight of fabric
The cushions change the rhythm of the frame. Their volume is generous, with a full seat and back that break up the lean teak lines. In beige, the upholstery stays close to the color of sand and dry stone, which helps the collection sit naturally in the terrace setting. The fabric is visually soft, but it also defines the seating depth and gives the outdoor teak lounge a lower, more relaxed profile. Around it, the floor remains open, so the furniture can breathe.
Seen in the wider terrace view, those cushions do another job: they connect the lounge to the dining side of the collection. The same light tone returns in the teak dining chairs, where the upholstered seats echo the lounge pieces without repeating them literally. That continuity lets the outdoor dining chairs feel like part of the same family, while still leaving room for a table setting of their own.
Teak dining chairs at the round table
The dining setup brings the collection into a different register. A round outdoor table and several teak dining chairs form a compact group that sits comfortably within the same material language as the lounge. The chairs have the same open structure and pale cushions, but the scale is more upright, more direct. Around the table, the curved edge creates a clear social center, and the wood grain remains visible against the lighter upholstery.
This is where the project shifts from lounging to dining without breaking the visual tone. The teak dining chairs keep the outline slender, while the seat and back cushions add enough volume to hold the arrangement together. The round tabletop helps that transition. It avoids hard corners and mirrors the softer lines found in the lounge pieces nearby. In a poolside terrace setting, that makes the dining area feel tied to the rest of the space rather than isolated from it.
A setting shaped by light, stone and planting
The surrounding architecture gives the collection its frame. Textured plaster, large glass openings and dark window surrounds form a backdrop that changes with the sun. Olive trees and other planting pull the eye away from the terrace edge, so the furniture is read against leaves, shadow and a pale wall. In some views, a stone retaining wall and steps appear at the side, adding a rougher material note next to the smooth cushions and the finished teak.
That mix of surfaces is what makes the setting easy to read. Wood, plaster, stone and water each hold light differently. The lounge collection sits in that sequence without competing with it. From the poolside edge to the covered terrace, the pieces remain visually consistent: teak structure, beige outdoor cushions, rounded edges, and a clear preference for open space around the furniture.
Furniture for slow hours outdoors
The project is strongest when viewed as a sequence of outdoor moments rather than a single static composition. A lounger by the pool, a sofa against the wall, a pair of chairs in the garden, the dining table under cover — each scene uses the same material base, but with a slightly different emphasis. The outdoor lounge collection is designed to be seen in movement across the terrace, where one seat leads naturally to the next.
Even in the more shaded images, the collection keeps its clarity. The teak frames are easy to trace, the cushions remain light against the darker surfaces around them, and the rounded organic forms stop the group from becoming too rigid. That balance between line and volume is what holds the page together. It is visible in the close-ups of the wood, in the poolside terrace setting, and in the dining chairs gathered around the round table.
What remains after the first look is not decoration, but structure: teak, fabric, curves and open air. The outdoor teak lounge and the accompanying teak dining chairs are presented as part of the same outdoor language, with beige outdoor cushions and quiet, rounded profiles carrying the collection through the terrace, the pool edge and the dining area.
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