Used Patio Furniture Nj

~*~ Wholesale Prices on Leather Furniture ~*~ Furniture Now <== SAVE http://Furniturenow.mobi Real Wholesale Prices on Leather Furniture ~ Furniture Now ~ http://Furniturenow.mobi $99, Mattress Discounters & Furniture !!! Custom made Rustic outdoor furniture $50, Glass half round table $300, Dining room table and 6 chairs $15, New WINDOW Treatments by Deco WrapBEAUTIFUL 2 piece dresser set - SOLID WOOD $500, Brown Sectional Couch 8 shelf beautiful well kept book case armoire $450, Two piece red sofa Mattress Factory's Outlet Stores * ( 1/2 Price Mattress Sale ) Call 201-281-0029 Beds On Sale! $1, Moving Sale Leaving NJ $125, Couch for sale $3,100, Ashley King North Shore Bedroom Set 6 PC $150, Tiffany Hanging LampMattress & Furniture Sales ... $375, King Cali Bed - MOVING WEDNESDAY - $375 Mattress Discounts * Bargain Outlets * New Jerseys Best Prices * All Sizes * Call 201-281-0029 Beds Mattress Factory's Discount Outlets Stores ...

50% OFF SALE ... $499, Claudia All Leather Sofa - Slate Gray -*** Limited Supply *** $499 ! Furniture Now - Deals Only ! New Jersey's Mattress Factory's Discount Stores Sale ...Open To The Public...Fast Delivery & Set Up $399, Futon & Functional Convertible Sofa Bed Sleepers & Mattresses - Free Nationwide ShippingCall Rick 50% OFF SALE ... $189, Safavieh Bench Brand New In Box! Naturepedic Organic Baby and Kids Mattresses Free Shipping New Jersey's Mattress Factory's Discount Stores...Fast Delivery & Set Up Call Mattress Sale ...$199 TWIN SET...$249 FULL SET...$299 QUEEN SET ((( MATTRESS SALE ))) 201-281-0029 $99, New Jersey's Mattress Warehouse Outlets Sale ...Mattress 1/2 Price Sale .. $2,495, [NEW] Seagrass 5 Piece Roll Arm Sectional in Honey- Beautifully woven by expert weavers! $99, Jersey's *New Mattress Factory's * Furniture & Mattress Discount Stores * Call 201-281-0029 New Jersey's Mattress Discounters Furniture & Mattress Sale .

Call .201-281-0029...Fast Delivery ... $1,159, Willem Antique Ash Brown 5pc Dining Table Parson Chairs Set Huge Dining Room Table Furniture Sale $970, Tempur-Pedic Cloud Elite Mattress New Jersey's Mattress Warehouse Outlets Sale ...Mattress 1/2 Price Sale . Extra Discounts On All Display Clearance Patio Furniture Models! Shop NOW for Best Selection!Order Your Outdoor Furniture Set Today & SAVE!Worth The Trip From Anywhere! Our Outdoor Furniture specialists will help you determine exactly which patio furniture collection best meets your personal needs and will compliment your surroundings. Whether it is wood, wicker, cast aluminum or sling, Pelican's PA & NJ patio furniture stores have what you need to make your special space an Oasis of Comfort. From the initial purchase to final home set-up, your satisfaction is our primary concern. Our outdoor furniture prices are competitive and our personalized service is Spectacular. Please, come and visit our patio furniture showrooms and soak in all the delights of outdoor and casual furnishings.

Check out our selection of Patio Furniture Please choose from the links at the left to view all outdoor furniture and accessories. For your convenience, many of our sets are on display in our Flanders, NJ warehouse. Unfortunately due to the size and weight of these items, patio furniture cannot be shipped. All-Weather Outdoor Patio Fabric By The Yard Maxim Sunbrella Fabric
Best Tennis Shoes For Bad KneesUp to 25% off Grills
Learn Vacuum Cleaner Repair + Free Store Pickup
Kid N Play T Shirt Hot Topic Items sold by Kmart. Kmart now offers home delivery for those oversized items that you cannot fit into your car. Starting at $59.99, additional items can be added for $10 per item. Kmart Home delivery Includes: Arranging a convenient delivery timeframe.

Transporting the item(s) to your delivery address. Placement in desired accessible location.Excludes: Hot Buy and Clearance items. Offer applies to items shipped via ground shipping only. , , , Sears Parts Direct, Sears licensed partner websites, Sears Presents, or Shop At Home catalogs. Free Delivery shipping value varies by ship to location. Items shipped via lowest cost or ground shipping method. for delivery within Puerto Rico (no delivery to Alaska, Hawaii, Guam, Canada, Mexico, the U.S. Virgin Islands or to Military APO/FPO addresses). Estimated offer value at up to $75.Estimated offer value at up to $75.Everyone who sells, specs or collects vintage modern outdoor furniture seems to know the story of Walter Lamb. It’s a tale that evokes all the ingenuity and scrappiness, if you will, of young designers just after World War II, when imaginations were set free both by the longed-for end to that conflict and by new materials available as a result of wartime research and development.

Lamb, a UC Berkeley–trained architect living in Hawaii in the late 1940s, got hold of some metal tubing salvaged from sunken naval ships at Pearl Harbor. Weaving nautical rope around frames made of this material, he fashioned elegant chaises and other pieces for the new backyards of returning GIs and their families. Lamb’s designs were soon picked up by the then-new Brown Jordan furniture company of Pasadena, California, and they’ve since become — in both vintage and more recent versions (Brown Jordan reissued the collection in 2009) — a lodestar of good American outdoor furniture design. “Lamb worked with bronze steam tubes from the bottom of the ocean, a copper alloy with beautiful patina,” says Eric Drury, who has been restoring vintage Lamb and other patio furniture since the 1980s, when his father bought a small Palm Springs hotel and offered his teenage son a free room for spring break if he figured out how to rescue a group of sun-damaged vinyl chaises. “People definitely appreciate the stuff that has age, as opposed to the repros,” Drury says.

“It’s part of history.” Maurizio Tempestini for Salterini Radar Hoop chairs, 1950s–60s, offered by Iconic Snob Galeries Richard Schultz for Knoll Model 715 chaise lounge, 1960s, offered by Collage 20th Century Classics Russell Woodard Sculptura settee, 1960s, offered by Pegboard Modern Hendrik van Keppel and Taylor Green patio furnishing collection, 1938–50, offered by R.E. Steele Russell Woodard patio lounge chairs, 1960s, offered by Carol Master Interiors Mario Papperzini for Salterini patio lounge chair and ottoman, ca. 1950, offered by Blend Interiors Lamb’s adventurous designs, and those of other mid-century designers noted for their seminal outdoor furniture — a list that includes Hendrik Van Keppel and Taylor Green, Russell Woodard, Maurizio Tempestini for Salterini and Richard Schultz for Knoll — is often found among the offerings of such 1stdibs dealers as Collage, 20th Century Classics, R.E. Steele, Sputnik Modern and Barbarella Home.

“I use vintage furniture wherever possible, including in my own garden,” says Mario Nievera of Nievera Williams Landscape Architecture, the renowned Palm Beach firm whose portfolio includes everything from residences to civic parks and institutional campuses. “Most vintage furniture is so comfortable and well-scaled for residential gardens. There may be some maintenance required, but it’s worth the effort.” “There’s a lot of need and desire to redo vintage patio furniture, because the new can actually be more expensive, and the stuff made back then was made a little bit better — in the U.S., not overseas,” says Shelly Haywood, an owner of Modern Vault in Newport Beach, California, who presently has a set of two low-slung aluminum lounge chairs and an ottoman by Tadao Inouye for Brown Jordan on offer. “There are purists who are fanatical about having the real deal. They want their mid-century homes to be period-correct.” Vintage patio furniture can be restored almost indefinitely, says Drury, who recently flew to Houston to “re-rope” an 18-piece set of Lamb furniture.

He has used as much as 1,600 feet of braided yacht cord to refresh a “double-wide” chaise by Van Keppel-Green, and stitches new slings for Schultz pieces on an industrial sewing machine in his Newport Beach workshop. Well-scaled and comfortable, mid-century patio furniture is frequently used in projects like this Palm Beach, Florida, courtyard by landscape architect Mario Nievera. The terrace at the New York offices of Robert A.M. Stern Architects is furnished with Walter Lamb “S” chaise longues and patio seating. Photo by Peter Aaron New chaise longues from Schultz’s classic 1966 collection for Knoll furnish the poolside deck of a residence in Water Mill, New York. Photo by Scott Frances California led the way, as patios accessed through the sliding-glass doors of new ranch houses proliferated and “indoor/outdoor living” became a watchword among decorating magazines and department store tastemakers. But other regions of the country needed outdoor furniture, too.

In Florida, says Andy Casas, an owner of Iconic Snob Galeries in West Palm Beach and Miami’s Alexander Millen Gallery, “The most important, if you’re doing a beach house, is cast aluminum by Molla from the 1950s. It’s great by the shore — no salt issues, no maintenance.” The British furniture maker, which had a factory in the New York area in the mid-20th century, produced chairs and benches with a neoclassical feel, using seahorse and scallop shell motifs. Casas also cites the local popularity of Brown Jordan’s 1960s Surf Line and mid-century designer Dan Johnson’s 1954 Sol y Luna chairs, an attenuated take-off on the ancient Greek klismos chair, produced in cast aluminum for outdoor use. “Why buy run-of-the-mill patio furniture from Pottery Barn or Restoration Hardware when you can have a killer set you don’t see everywhere? It’s like sculpture for the garden.” In colder regions, wrought iron, which can be left outdoors all year round, was the material of choice in outdoor furniture designs for the Atomic Age.

Russell Woodard’s 1950s Sculptura series, a metal mesh design with swooping curves made by Lee L. Woodard Sons of Owosso, Michigan, was widely distributed in the Midwest, says David Carter of Pegboard Modern. “We’re not tripping over it, but we come across a fair amount.” “Woodard is stylish and durable,” says Michael De Santis, of Barbarella Home, who recently sold an original five-piece patio set to owners of a townhouse in Greenwich Village, and whose inventory includes two-dozen Woodard table bases from Kutscher’s Hotel in the Catskills. “They’re Space Age-y, with a brushed aluminum finish.” Russell Woodard plank slab coffee table, 1950s, offered by Barbarella Home Tadao Inouye for Brown Jordan Kantan chairs and ottoman, ca. 1950, offered by Modern Vault Walter Lamb bronze Waikiki rocking chaise longue, 1950s, offered by Sputnik Modern Walter Lamb bronze dining set, 1950s, offered by Galerie XX John Salterini nesting wrought-iron garden tables, 1930s, offered by Barbarella Home

Dan Johnson Sol y Luna armchairs and ottoman, 1970s, offered by Iconic Snob Galeries Another name that stands out among aficionados is John B. Salterini, the New York maker of wrought-iron “Neva-Rust” patio furniture from the late 1920s into the 1950s. The hoop-like Clamshell series by Tempestini, an Italian designer who worked with Salterini in the ’50s, is having a moment, particularly the cantilevered chaise with footrest and the two-person tete-a-tete. In the earlier years at Salterini, traditionally decorative designs dominated. “Most modern dealers won’t touch it,” De Santis says. I don’t want it!’ But I’ll buy it if it’s stylish. It probably won’t end up in the Hamptons, but it will ship out to Georgia or Texas.” Indestructible wrought iron can be sandblasted and powder-coated any color. Landscape designer Susan Welti of Brooklyn’s Foras Studio used a Woodard Sculptura dining set to add a jolt of red to the bluestone-paved backyard of a brownstone in Boerum Hill.

“Bloom is hard to accomplish in a tiny garden, so I love using furniture as a color element, especially on the vintage stuff, which is so sculptural,” Welti says. “New outdoor furniture tends to be big and squat and square. The Woodard pieces have skinny legs and a gentle curved shape to the seat. It’s a nice juxtaposition with visual interest.” Dan Thorpe of La Guardia Design in Water Mill, New York, likes Schultz’s 1960s Knoll designs for similar reasons, and often specs the iconic chaise with its signature solid wheel, along with Schultz dining sets, lounge chairs and bar stools for Hamptons poolsides. “It’s light and airy and transparent, not bulky and blocky like thick teak furniture, so it doesn’t cut into your view of the garden,” Thorpe says. Though his firm creates cutting-edge modernist landscapes, often around newly built homes, he uses Schultz more than any other outdoor furniture. “It’s just timeless, and it complements the contemporary garden very nicely.”