Modular sculptural outdoor lounge
Bronze frames, light cushions and woven sides set the tone before the layout even comes into view. Loreto is a modular outdoor lounge built from soft volumes and rounded lines, with pieces that can be arranged as compact seating corners or stretched out into broader compositions. The collection is made for terraces, garden settings and poolside pauses, where the furniture has to work with shifting light, changing views and the way people actually move through an outdoor space.
Modular outdoor lounge as a spatial starting point
The collection is assembled from corner modules, middle modules and chaise longues, with a cozy sofa as its most recognisable element. One side can take the backrests, letting the sofa turn gently around a corner and open up new configurations. That simple move changes the reading of the whole set. A compact nook becomes a longer line; a lounge island grows across the terrace; an S-shaped arrangement starts to introduce a stronger spatial rhythm. In every version, the sculptural outdoor seating keeps its rounded profile and low, relaxed stance.
The effect is clearest when the elements are seen together on a deck edged by planting or beside water. The lines do not stay rigid. They bend, extend and gather. That is what makes the modular outdoor lounge feel adaptable without losing its identity. It can read as a daybed style outdoor seating arrangement when used on its own, or as part of a larger sequence with the corner module taking the lead and the chaise longues completing the edge.
Terrace views framed by greenery
On the terrace, the light upholstery stands out against the darker lines of the frame and the wood-look boards underfoot. The surrounding greenery softens the geometry of the seating, while the large glass surfaces in the background reflect the garden and make the arrangement feel tied to the house rather than set apart from it. A small round side table appears in some views, keeping the scene grounded and giving the cushions, armrests and woven panels something precise to orbit around.
The outdoor sofa with cushions is generous without becoming bulky. Its proportions sit low enough to keep the horizon open, which matters in a terrace setting where trees, lawn and architecture are all part of the view. The bronze tone of the frame stays restrained. It gives the lounge a clear edge, but it does not compete with the planting or the pale textiles. Instead, the materials define the outline and let the arrangement read from a distance.
How the sofa turns the corner
The backrests can be placed to one side, so the sofa does not stop at a straight line. It folds around the corner and changes the seating route. That movement is small, but visually it matters. A straight bench becomes a more deliberate composition, and the outdoor corner module starts to guide how the rest of the furniture is read. The same idea works in larger layouts too: the modules can pull inward for a tighter conversation zone or spread out to form a broader lounge island with more open edges.
Because the pieces are designed to connect rather than lock into a single plan, the collection supports several outdoor configurations without looking improvised. An S-shaped layout can introduce a softer transition across a big terrace. A daybed-like version can hold its own beside a pool. A pair of chaise longues can create a quieter pause at the edge of a wider seating plan. The sculptural outdoor seating keeps the same visual language in each version, which is what makes the collection easy to read. Modular outdoor lounge remains connected to the layout, materials and daily use of the home.
By the pool, the lounge reads differently
Water changes the surfaces around it. In the poolside outdoor lounge views, reflections move across the stone and the metal accents, while the pale cushions become a calmer plane against the blue water. The setting is less about enclosure and more about distance, with the seating holding its own beside the rectangular pool. Here the daybed style outdoor seating feels especially apt, because the low, extended forms echo the horizontal line of the water without copying it.
The terrace edge, the pool rim and the furniture frames create a sequence of parallel lines. Within that geometry, the lounge remains soft. The rope and belt seating details introduce texture where the view might otherwise become flat. Seen close up, the woven outdoor lounge detail breaks the surface into a finer pattern and gives the furniture a layered look that becomes more visible in daylight.
A mobile lounger and a serving trolley with purpose
The mobile lounger adds movement to an otherwise stable composition. Set on wheels and adjustable, it can shift with the day, following morning sun or late afternoon shade. It can sit alone as a place to recline, or extend a larger modular outdoor lounge when more seating is needed. Its mobility is practical, but it also changes the way the collection is used: the arrangement does not stay fixed to one angle or one use.
The serving trolley is the most compact object in the group, yet it carries a clear presence. Bronze aluminium, a teak top, a custom cutting board and tray give it a distinct material mix. It works at the edge of a meal or a drink setting, but it also reads as a sculptural piece when left on its own. In a composition of cushions, rounded backs and woven panels, that small hard-edged element adds another layer to the modular outdoor lounge.
Materials that stay visible, not hidden
What holds the collection together is the way the materials remain legible from every angle. The warm bronze frame forms the base, while the all weather cushions in natural tones keep the seating visually soft. Rope and belt elements add a woven rhythm to the sides and support areas, and the teak details bring a clearer grain to the serving trolley and selected parts of the set. Nothing is overworked. Each surface does a different job, and that division is easy to see in the images.
The result is a modular outdoor lounge that can sit in a garden, on a terrace or beside a pool without losing its shape. Its strength lies in how the parts relate: the corner module turns the line, the chaise longue extends it, the mobile lounger loosens it, and the trolley sharpens the composition. Together they form sculptural outdoor seating that stays open to rearrangement, which is exactly what gives the collection its usefulness over time.
In the close-up images, the woven outdoor lounge detail becomes more than a surface note. It marks the hand of the piece and gives the lounge a tactile edge against the smooth cushions. In the wider shots, the same detail sits within a larger outdoor setting of glass, planting and water. That shift from texture to layout is where Loreto is strongest: it can be read as a material study, a seating plan or a daybed style outdoor seating arrangement, depending on how close you stand. Modular outdoor lounge remains connected to the layout, materials and daily use of the home.
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