Outdoor Umbrellas for Cool, Beautiful Shade
Patio Productions
Architectural cantilevers and classic market silhouettes, in fade-proof canopies engineered to stand against sun, wind and season after season.
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Featured Maker
Treasure Garden AKZ PLUS
The benchmark in cantilever shade — 360° rotation, infinite tilt and marine-grade canopies in hundreds of fabrics. Effortless, architectural coverage for lounge and poolside.
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Considered in every detail
Fade-proof, all-season canopies
Cast-aluminum durability
Residential & Commercial

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Complimentary Design Services
Tell us about your space, your climate and your style — and our USA-based design atelier will compose a complete outdoor room, from layout to fabric, at no cost to you.

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The Patio Productions Design Center
Explore our 12,000 sq. ft. design center — hundreds of outdoor pieces on display, just off the I-5 near Little Italy & Mission Hills. Meet a design specialist in person, or book a complimentary consultation.
2161 Hancock St
San Diego, CA 92110
Mon–Fri 10am–6pm · Sat–Sun 10am–5pm
1-888-947-4449· info@patioproductions.com
Outdoor Umbrellas for Cool, Beautiful Shade
Market and cantilever umbrellas from Treasure Garden and Frankford — fade-proof canopies and cast-aluminum frames built to handle whatever the season brings. At Patio Productions, every piece is hand-selected by our USA-based design team and made to bring your outdoors to life — beautifully, and for years to come.
Frequently asked questions
What's the difference between market and cantilever umbrellas?
A market umbrella has a center pole and typically stands through a patio table. A cantilever umbrella is offset on a side arm, suspending shade over your seating without a pole in the way — ideal for poolside and lounge areas.
Will the canopy fade in the sun?
Our canopies use marine-grade, fade-proof fabric similar to canvas but sturdier and more water-resistant, designed for minimal maintenance and long life.
Do I need a separate base?
Most umbrellas require a base sized to the canopy. Weighted bases are recommended for windier climates — our team can help you match the right base to your umbrella.
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Outdoor Umbrellas Built for Real Shade, Not Just Shape
A patio umbrella earns its place by doing one job well: putting real, usable shade exactly where people are sitting. Our market umbrellas and cantilever umbrellas cover the two ways that actually happens, and everything in this collection is built from materials rated for years outside, not one summer.
Market or Cantilever
Market umbrellas are the classic format: the pole runs straight down through the center of the canopy, usually through a table's umbrella hole. They're the right call whenever there's a dining or bistro table underneath, and they're the more affordable path to real shade square-foot for square-foot.
Cantilever umbrellas move the pole off to the side entirely, suspending the canopy from an offset arm instead. That single change is what makes them work over a sectional, a daybed, or any lounge arrangement without a hole drilled for a pole, and it's why cantilevers have become the standard choice around pools, where a center-pole umbrella has nowhere to go.
What the Canopy Fabric Actually Has to Do
Canopy fabric on a quality outdoor umbrella is solution-dyed acrylic, most commonly Sunbrella, O'Bravia, or Recacril, which means the color is built into the fiber rather than printed on top of it. That's the difference between a canopy that fades evenly over years and one that bleaches out in a single season. Frames are powder-coated aluminum, chosen specifically because it won't rust the way steel does at the pivot points and joints that see the most stress.
Getting the Base Right
The base is not an afterthought. A market umbrella typically needs 50 to 90 pounds of base weight depending on canopy size, while a cantilever, with all its weight offset to one side, needs considerably more, often 200 pounds or more, or a permanent in-ground mount. Wheeled bases are worth the small premium if you expect to move the umbrella between a dining table and a lounge area through the season.
Commercial and Architectural Options
Restaurants and hotel pool decks put more stress on an umbrella in a season than a backyard sees in a decade, which is why our commercial patio umbrellas are built with heavier-gauge frames and reinforced ribs. For a more architectural look, our designer umbrellas collection covers sculptural and cantilevered shapes meant to be a visual centerpiece rather than just cover.
Patio Productions is ICFA-certified and has been outfitting outdoor spaces from our San Diego showroom and nationally since 2007. Every order ships free in the U.S., and our team offers complimentary design consultations if you're trying to figure out canopy size, base weight, or which format actually fits your space.
Common Questions About Outdoor Umbrellas
If there's a table with an umbrella hole underneath, get a market umbrella. If you're shading a sectional, daybed, or pool deck, get a cantilever. Market umbrellas are simpler and less expensive because the pole runs straight through the table. Cantilevers solve the problem a market umbrella can't: shading furniture that has no pole hole, at any angle, without the pole itself getting in the way of the seating.
Market umbrellas typically need 50 to 90 pounds of base weight; cantilever umbrellas need 200 pounds or more, or an in-ground mount. Base weight scales with canopy size and wind exposure, and cantilevers need more because the entire canopy hangs off to one side of the base rather than directly above it. Coastal or regularly windy locations should size up regardless of format.
All three are solution-dyed acrylic fabrics built for outdoor fade and mildew resistance; the differences come down to brand, weight, and warranty specifics. Solution-dyeing means the color is built into the fiber itself rather than applied afterward, which is why these fabrics resist fading in a way printed canvas can't match. Each brand has its own weave weight and warranty terms, but the underlying performance for shade and weather resistance is comparable across all three.
Yes. Close and secure any patio umbrella ahead of high wind, regardless of base weight. A closed canopy sheds wind load dramatically better than an open one, and no base weight fully protects an open umbrella from a serious gust. Most umbrellas include canopy ties to keep them secured in the closed position between uses.
Commercial umbrellas use heavier-gauge frames and reinforced ribs built for daily use at hospitality volume. A residential umbrella might get used a few times a week; a restaurant or hotel pool deck umbrella gets opened, closed, and repositioned daily for years. Commercial-grade construction is built specifically to hold up to that cycle without the frame fatiguing.






















































































