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Iron Built to Stay
In a catalog full of lightweight, easy-to-move options, wrought iron is the deliberate choice to stay put. The heaviest material in our outdoor furniture collection, it rewards permanence — a table and chairs that settle into a courtyard or garden and become part of the space rather than furniture you need to anchor or stow away. The aesthetic is rooted in European garden and café tradition: decorative scrollwork, forged curves, silhouettes that read as classic the moment they land on a patio.
Our wrought iron collection covers the full range of outdoor settings. Wrought iron dining sets are the category's showpiece — available from intimate two-tops to family-scale arrangements, with table sizes and chair styles to suit formal terraces and casual backyards alike. Wrought iron sofa and deep seating sets bring the same visual weight and craftsmanship to outdoor lounging. For elevated entertaining, wrought iron bar chairs and tables carry the material's traditional character to counter height without losing any of its presence.
Construction, Finish, and Why It Holds Up
Durability in wrought iron is structural, not just a finish story. Every joint is fully welded around the entire circumference of the seam — not spot-welded or tacked — which means no weak points where stress accumulates over years of outdoor use. Over that comes a complete powder-coat finish: baked on, not brushed, sealing the iron against rust, UV degradation, and the edge-peeling that compromises cheaper finishes within a few seasons. Maintenance is wipe-and-done. The coating handles the weather; you just enjoy the furniture.
Weight is wrought iron's most distinctive physical property, and in most outdoor contexts it's an asset. Wind doesn't move it. Gusts that scatter lighter chairs leave wrought iron exactly where you placed it. For coastal properties, windy hillsides, or any setting where stability is a priority, that weight earns its keep. If frequent repositioning is part of how you use your outdoor space, aluminum patio furniture offers a compelling alternative. But if you're furnishing a space to stay, wrought iron is the honest answer.
The Aesthetic — Classic Without Being Frozen in Time
Wrought iron occupies a particular design lane: formal enough for a classical garden, relaxed enough for a neighborhood patio, and classic enough not to look dated in either. The decorative detailing that defines the style isn't ornamentation for its own sake — it's a continuation of the European ironwork tradition, where craftsmen developed the aesthetic vocabulary that still defines the category. That history shows in the furniture: the scrollwork, the tapered legs, the proportions that make even a simple dining chair look considered. Woodard — one of the oldest names in American wrought iron furniture — uses a hand-wrought process that gives each piece a craftsman quality distinct from machine-formed alternatives, and their frames carry that distinction through decades of outdoor use.
Cushions are optional but transform the experience. Sunbrella fabric — available in hundreds of colors and patterns — adds warmth and color to pieces that read beautifully without them. The outdoor-rated fabric resists UV fade and moisture, and zip-off covers make cleaning simple. The iron frame will outlast several rounds of cushion fabric, which is part of what makes investing in the material feel like a genuinely long-term decision. Patio Productions is ICFA-certified and has been outfitting patios from our San Diego showroom and nationally since 2007. Every order ships free in the U.S. and arrives fully assembled. Our USA-based team offers complimentary design services, custom Sunbrella cushion selections, and white glove delivery on select orders.
Frequently Asked Questions About Wrought Iron Patio Furniture
| Is wrought iron patio furniture rust-proof? |
Yes, when properly powder-coated — which all wrought iron furniture in our collection is. Bare iron will rust, but a correctly applied powder-coat finish seals the metal against moisture and oxygen indefinitely. Minor chips or scratches can be touched up with powder-coat touch-up paint to maintain the barrier. Avoid abrasive cleaners that could scratch the surface, and the finish handles normal outdoor exposure without intervention. |
| How heavy is wrought iron patio furniture? |
Considerably heavier than aluminum or composite — that's intentional. A wrought iron dining chair typically weighs 15 to 25 pounds; a dining table can run 60 to 100 pounds or more depending on size. The weight keeps the furniture stable in wind and gives it the substantial feel the material is known for. If you need to move or store furniture frequently, aluminum is worth considering instead. |
| Can wrought iron furniture stay outside year-round? |
In most climates, yes. The powder-coat finish is built for permanent outdoor placement. In regions with extreme winters or sustained humidity, bringing cushions indoors during the off-season extends their life considerably — the frames themselves don't require seasonal storage. A light coat of car wax once a year provides additional moisture protection in particularly wet climates, though most owners skip this without issue. |
| What is the difference between wrought iron and cast iron patio furniture? |
Wrought iron is worked and shaped while heated — the process produces a material that's strong, somewhat malleable, and well suited to the decorative detailing that defines traditional outdoor furniture. Cast iron is poured molten into molds, making it harder but more brittle and prone to cracking under impact or temperature stress, which is why it's rarely used for outdoor furniture. Most outdoor furniture marketed today as "wrought iron" uses steel alloys finished and shaped to match the traditional aesthetic, all of which carry the same powder-coat protection and visual character. |





























