Monday, August 15, 2011

Buying And Maintaining Farmhouse Garden Furniture

By Owen Jones


Farmhouse garden furniture is otherwise known as rustic garden furniture and goes back to the old days of farms and country living. It is a style all of its own and is quite distinctive. Generally, farmhouse garden furniture is coarse, bulky and heavy. Occasionally it is roughly cut, but that is not always the case although it is seldom carved in great detail. Farmhouse garden furniture is made to last.

Farmhouse garden furniture includes the complete assortment of garden furniture such as tables, chairs, benches, gazebos and arbours. Farmhouse garden furniture is usually made of local timber, but can also be made of iron.

To compliment the garden furniture, there is also indoor furniture in the farmhouse style although this may be a little finer, a little less heavy so that it can be moved around for cleaning purposes.

Farmhouse garden furniture is usually manufactured from local hardwood such as oak, cherry, maple, mahogany, teak or beech, but in fact anything that is to hand. Softwood, such as pine, is cheaper, but it does not usually last as long as hardwood even if it is maintained regularly and as it should be.

Hardwood furniture may be stained, oiled or varnished, although it is normally best to just rub linseed oil into the natural timber. A bit of staining may help bring out the charming natural graining in the wood.

Softwood garden furniture is usually full of knots which many people find ugly. If this is how you feel, then you can give the furniture three coats of paint in order to safeguard it.

If however, the knots do not worry you, you can stain and varnish it instead. In either state of affairs, all farmhouse garden furniture should be maintained every year in the autumn; that is when the sun is no longer at its hottest and before the rain and cold weather set in. The trouble with anything manufactured of any wood is rot.

Hardwood contains more natural oils than softwood so it is better able to safeguard itself, but all timber stops producing these oils when you kill it by cutting it down. The oil on the surface is dried out by the sun and these dry patches then draw some oil up from deeper inside itself, but the further inside it needs to suck the oil from the less it can draw, which means that eventually the outside becomes dry and then it will take in water.

When that happens, rot has set in. Hardwood can last a couple of years before it gets to this wretched state, but softwood will perhaps last less than a year. This is why you have to seal the oil in and the water out with paint or varnish in the case of softwood or restock the oil by rubbing in linseed oil in the instance of hardwood.

You could paint hardwood too if you want to, but most people buy hardwood farmhouse garden furniture because it has a lovely grain and paint would only cover up that grain. Decent farmhouse garden furniture is not cheap, but it is attractive, difficult to steal and will last a lifetime if well looked after by a few hours maintenance once a year.




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