How to Buy a Garden Bench

The ideal flourish for your garden, a garden bench is as practical as it is beautiful. In the garden, it can be a good place to rest tools or freshly cut flowers - or to sit happily and view your work. Does this Spark an idea?

Things You'll Need

  • Garden Benches
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Instructions

    • 1

      Check out the material. Pine won't last long outdoors. Better choices are cedar, cypress or redwood, with teak being one of the finest of all outdoor furniture woods (not to mention one of the most expensive). Metal benches are exceptionally durable, as long as they feel heavy and solidly constructed, but are less comfortable. Stone and concrete are the most durable of all, but are usually the least comfortable.

    • 2

      Check out the construction if the bench is wood. As a rule, the fewer screws and bolts, the better. Look instead for mortise-and-tenon joinery.

    • 3

      Consider size. A 4-foot bench will seat one person comfortably and two people adequately if they don't mind sitting very close together. A 5-foot bench is better for seating those who are just friends.

    • 4

      Consider price. To some extent, you get what you pay for. A $200 4-foot wooden bench of cedar will last perhaps five to eight years, while a $1,000 teak bench will probably last 20. However, with higher-priced benches - which can top $2,000 - the price usually reflects more unusual styling or design.

    • 5

      Buy locally whenever possible. Shipping costs for benches can be hefty - $50 or more. If you see a bench you love in a catalog, take the catalog to your local furniture or garden supply store, where you don't have to pay for shipping. It's possible that your local store deals with the same wholesalers and can order the bench for you.

Tips & Warnings

  • Many garden furniture makers will attach a brass plaque with an inscription for just a few more dollars.

  • If the bench is made of a tropical wood, such as mahogany or teak, be sure to ask if it's plantation-grown. Some so-called exotic woods are harvested from endangered rain forests, but plantation-grown woods were raised specifically for that purpose, and their harvest has less of an environmental impact.

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Comments

  • smittyhaven May 07, 2009
    Hmmm...links didn't work see ebay items 260405724767 and 260405736384!

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