The Province

Sit back and relax in style and comfort

DECORATING: As baby boomers embrace the recliner, La-Z-Boy and other manufactur­ers up their game

- MELISSA KOSSLER DUTTON

Including recliners in home decorating projects used to be an interior designer’s nightmare, says Bonnie Lewis, founder of 55+ TLC Interior Design in Scottsdale, Ariz.

But the easy chair has had a face lift, thanks largely to baby boomers.

“Before, this furniture was strictly about the function — meaning it could recline, but there wasn’t much to the esthetics of it,” says Lewis, whose firm specialize­s in design for older adults. “Because boomers want that cleaner-line look, it’s pushing the manufactur­ers to get on board.”

Recliners used to come in one profile: big and bulky, says Bruce Birnbach, CEO of American Leather in Dallas.

Today, he and his competitor­s offer recliners “in every size and shape and style,” he says.

Like other manufactur­ers, La-ZBoy, which introduced the recliner in 1928 and for years built a reputation more on comfort than on style, has added automation to the chairs and offers models smaller and more stylish. But La-Z-Boy will never stop making the traditiona­l chairs that made the company’s name synonymous with recliners, says Penny Eudy, product manager of upholstery for La-Z-Boy in Monroe, Mich.

“We want to cast a wider net to attract that more stylish consumer and get them coming in, but we want to do it without alienating the customers that we’ve always had,” she says.

Eudy believes recliners are the ideal chair for the modern home: “We all are living more casually and more comfortabl­y than we ever have.”

The trend toward open living spaces means that customers are looking for furniture that’s less formal but still eye-catching, says Erin Berg, an associate editor at Furniture Today magazine in Greensboro, N.C. Open-floor plans mean there’s nowhere to hide an ugly recliner, and no place for a formal chair that’s not comfortabl­e, she says.

New recliners’ smaller footprint gives homeowners more flexibilit­y, Berg says. Some manufactur­ers offer a “wall-hugger” feature: The seat moves forward when it reclines, allowing the chair to be placed against a wall.

Many reclining chairs, sofas and sectionals now plug in or run on battery packs, allowing them to do everything from charging your phone to cooling your drink, while providing an articulate­d head rest and lumbar support.

“Today’s recliners have become sleek and smooth functionin­g, combining designer-quality looks with engineer-quality operations,” says Patricia Bowling, a spokeswoma­n for the American Home Furnishing­s Alliance in High Point, N.C. “Baby boomers love their gadgets. They love being connected.”

Four out of every 10 recliners purchased in 2014 were for Boomer households, according to a Furniture Today study released in 2015.

The variety of new fabrics and styles means that designers no longer shy away from the chairs, Lewis says. “Before, when a client wanted a recliner, you worried that it was going to ruin the whole look,” she says.

Lift chairs, which rise to help the occupant stand up, have also become more versatile and attractive, she says, moving from institutio­ns into homes as homeowners look for ways to age in place.

“They’re not as slick as the plain recliner, but they’re getting there,” she says.

And as baby boomers downsize their homes, multi-functional furniture like the recliner becomes more important, says Sarah Dooley, principal designer at Leedy Interiors in Tinton Falls, N.J.

“The family room becomes the key room in the house,” she says. “It’s got to be livable and stylish, but function is key.”

 ?? — LEEDY INTERIORS FILES ?? A New Jersey home where interior designer Sarah Dooley helped this baby boomer client incorporat­e a sectional with reclining pieces into a room that combines comfort and style.
— LEEDY INTERIORS FILES A New Jersey home where interior designer Sarah Dooley helped this baby boomer client incorporat­e a sectional with reclining pieces into a room that combines comfort and style.

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