Outdoor Furniture Spotlight: Colorful, Recycled Designs from Loll - Gardenista
We love an Adirondack chair, but we don’t love splinters or rotting wood. In Loll math, one Adirondack chair equals 376 milk jugs, and since 2005 the company has turned more than 46 million of them into modern outdoor furniture.
San Francisco-based landscape architect Scott Lewis used Loll’s Emmet Lounge Chair (designed for Room & Board) in the garden of a Hillsborough, California home.
Photograph by Matthew Millman courtesy of Scott Lewis Landscape Architect.
Photograph by Sean Airhart courtesy of Heliotrope Architects.
Heliotrope Architects in Seattle used Loll’s Flat Adirondack Chairs ($748 apiece) around a backyard fire pit in the San Juan Islands of Washington state.
Photograph by Paul Dyer courtesy of Jeff King & Co.
San Francisco builder Jeff King & Co. used Loll’s gray Rectangle Planters in an urban carport project featured in Designer Visit: A Carport Makes a Difference.
The Fire Bench ($1,199) and Fire Chair ($724) are simple forms inspired by Loll’s popular Picket Collection but with horizontal (instead of vertical) slats.
Part of Loll’s ultramodern Lollygagger Collection, the Lollygagger Sofa ($1,069) is a two-seater version of the Lollygagger Lounge Chair ($512.50).
The Standard Adirondack Chair with flat back in charcoal gray is $748.
The Fresh Air Collection includes six tables and five benches of varying sizes, meant to mix and match.
The Cubby Bench stores shoes, boots, and garden accessories indoors or out.
Loll’s Milk Stool is a modern take on the traditional farmers’ stool.
The Rapson Low-Back Rocking Chair is Loll’s version of a circa-1940 design by American modernist architect Ralph Rapson; $1,240.