21% discount: 6’6 x 2’8 Forest Apex Overlap Logstore (2m x 0.8m)

£219.99

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    A wonderful woodstore for your stockpile of logs, the 6’6 x 2’8 Forest Apex Overlap Logstore (2m x 0.8m) keep firewood dry, aired and in optimal condition to burn effectively.Expertly built in Great Britain from tough 7mm overlap cladding, on a 28 x 28mm frame, this large logstore comes with a 1.75m³ log capacity. Robust, durable and incredibly stylish, it is pressure treated and supplied with an impressive 15-year anti-rot guarantee, so no further treatment is required, saving you money and leaving you more time to relax in front of the fire.The logstore’s extra-thick, slatted 16mm floor keeps logs properly aired too, ensuring your fire burns efficiently. It is fitted with pressure-treated bearers, so provides an excellent barrier against ground moisture.The roof is constructed from sturdy 8mm OSB. It features a traditional apex design and premium mineral felt cover for superb rainwater runoff and complete weatherproof protection. A diamond-shaped finial rounds off the logstore’s smart, attractive appearance.The timber used to construct this logstore is FSC®-certified, which is the only wood-certification scheme endorsed by all the major environmental charities. A full set of fixings and clear instructions are included to help you achieve a straightforward assembly.Free delivery is available to most UK postcodes.Pressure treated wood with impressive 15-year anti-rot guaranteeNo retreatment required – saving time and moneyExpertly built in Great BritainTough 7mm overlap claddingExtra-thick 16mm slatted floorPressure-treated bearers protect the floor/ logs from ground moisture8mm OSB roof with premium mineral felt coverFSC®-certified wood1.75m³ log capacityFree delivery to most UK postcodes

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Description

Storage special offers for sheds, boxes, cabinets and garden stores: compare compact, stackable and weather-resistant options for tidy outdoor spaces, smarter use of corners and quicker access to tools.

Boxes, bins and chests with different jobs

Storage in the garden comes in a few clear shapes, and each one behaves differently. Storage boxes are often the quickest answer for cushions, hand tools and smaller kits that need a dry spot close to the door. Storage bins tend to be lighter, more flexible and easier to shift when the layout changes. Storage chests usually bring a firmer lid and a more furniture-like look, so they sit well on patios or beside seating. The difference is not just size; it is how the lid closes, how the walls hold their shape, and how easy it is to lift items out without making a mess.

A narrow box can slide under a bench. A deep chest swallows bulkier bits. A lidded bin is handy for quick access. Small choice, big effect.

For special offers, it helps to look at what the item is meant to hold rather than chasing the biggest box on the shelf. Cushions need airflow and enough depth to avoid squashing. Tools need a shape that keeps handles together. Kids’ outdoor bits often work best in a container with a lower lip, so things can be grabbed without a full rummage. A lid that opens wide is useful when the contents change often, while a clip-on top suits things you want to keep tucked away. These little details make the set-up feel less clumsy, even when the storage itself is simple.

Materials that change the feel straight away

The material says a lot about how the storage will behave in real use. Plastic storage is light, easy to move and usually comes in clean-lined forms that suit smaller spaces. Resin-style finishes often give a neater look, with less of the shiny feel some basic plastics can have. Metal storage brings a firmer structure and a more rigid shape, which helps when the item needs to hold heavier loads without bowing. Timber storage has a warmer look and often blends better with plants, gravel and fencing, though the shape can be bulkier and more visible.

Each type has a different edge. Plastic can be faster to place, metal can feel more exact, and wood can soften a hard patio. None of these are the same, and that matters when the box is not tucked away in a corner but sits right in view. If the area gets sun, light colours may show less fade over time. If the space is tight, slimmer wall profiles can make a noticeable difference. If the storage has to sit on uneven ground, a base with a broader footprint often settles better than a narrow stand.

  • Plastic: light, simple to reposition, often used for quick-access outdoor storage.
  • Resin-look: tidy surface, less boxy appearance, often chosen for visible spots.
  • Metal: strong frame, firmer feel, suited to heavier contents.
  • Timber: softer visual finish, useful where the storage sits among planting.

Lids, doors and front openings

Storage special offers are easier to compare when the opening style is clear. Top-opening boxes are common for cushions and seasonal items because the inside space is unobstructed. Front-opening cabinets are better when you want to pull out one thing at a time without lifting the whole lid. Double-door storage can suit garden tools or taller items, especially where vertical space matters more than width. Some containers use a hinged lid, others a lift-off top, and that small choice changes how the item fits into daily use.

Lift-off lids can be fast, but they need somewhere to rest while you search inside. Hinged lids stay attached, which stops them being misplaced. Doors help when the storage is used like a small cupboard. For mixed contents, a split opening can be useful, as it keeps one side for bigger things and the other for smaller kits. The best option is not the fanciest one; it is the one that matches the way the garden is actually used.

One thing worth checking is how far the lid or door opens. In a narrow side passage, a wide swing can get in the way. In a corner, a top lid may need a clear space above it. Tiny detail, but it saves hassle. That is why storage shape matters as much as storage volume.

Sizes that work with the space you already have

Garden storage does not need to be huge to be useful. Small boxes suit balconies, courtyards and side paths where floor space is already busy. Mid-size storage often sits best on a patio edge, by the shed or beside a back door, where it can hold more but still stay compact. Larger chests and cabinets are better when several items live together and need one fixed home. Tall storage can make sense in narrow plots, because it uses height rather than spreading out across the ground.

The shape often matters more than the number on the label. A shallow, wide box may hold long items more neatly than a smaller deep one. A tall cabinet can keep upright tools separate from soft kit. A low unit can double as a seat or side surface, though that depends on the build and lid strength. If the garden already has fixed features, measure the usable gap rather than the open area as a whole. Fences, taps, steps and planters all change what fits.

For special offers, compare the internal layout, not just the outer look. Two items with the same outside size can behave very differently inside. One may have thick walls and less space within. Another may use the footprint better and hold odd-shaped gear with less fuss.

Weather response, airflow and the bits people forget

Outdoor storage is judged by more than capacity. Rain run-off, lid overlap and the way the base sits above damp ground all shape how it performs. Some items have a raised base that keeps the underside away from puddles. Others use a tighter lid edge to help shed water more cleanly. Ventilation can matter for cushions and textile items, since trapped air and moisture feel stuffy over time. For tools, airflow is less about freshness and more about avoiding that closed-in, wet-box feel.

It also helps to think about opening direction in wind. A lid that flips the wrong way can catch and feel awkward. A door that opens towards a fence may be limited by what is around it. These are the small differences that make one storage option feel calmer than another. There is no single answer, but there is often a better fit for the space in front of you.

Check what kind of base the item uses. Some storage sits flat and low. Some has small feet. Some uses a raised frame. Each one changes the look and the contact with the ground. In a paved area, low-contact feet can help the item feel less heavy. On gravel, a flatter base may sit more even. Small but useful.

When a bench is also storage

Combination storage has its own place in the category. A bench with a hidden compartment can hold soft items while still giving a perch for shoes, pruning jobs or just taking a break. This type suits patios and entrances because it does two jobs without adding another large object to the scene. The difference from a plain chest is that the seat becomes part of the structure, which means the lid, hinges and internal shape all work a little harder.

Bench storage often feels less formal than a cabinet and less bulky than a full chest. It can tuck under a window, run along a wall or sit near a doorway where quick access matters. If the area is shared, that extra surface can stop clutter from spreading. But it is worth checking whether the inside shape suits the thing you want to store, because some bench units favour flatter items over bulky ones.

  • Bench storage: seat plus hidden space.
  • Cabinet storage: upright, compartment-like, better for taller items.
  • Chest storage: broad internal volume, often used for soft garden kit.

What to compare in special offers before the price tag wins

Special offers are most useful when they highlight the right detail. Look at how the storage opens, how the walls are built, and whether the shape matches the item you own already. A lower price on the wrong form is still the wrong form. A slightly higher price on the right size and opening style can save space and awkward stacking. The aim is not to fill the garden with more containers; it is to give each item a clear place.

Also compare whether the storage is open-top, fully enclosed or partly enclosed. Open units suit dry, quick-grab items but leave contents more exposed. Fully enclosed units give a cleaner line and keep loose things together. Partly enclosed designs can sit somewhere between the two, especially where the front is accessible but the top remains sealed. Each version has a different rhythm. That is why the underarten matter as much as the price.

A good tip is to think in pairs: hard items together, soft items together. Tall with tall. Flat with flat. That keeps storage calmer and stops wasted gaps. Another tip is to check the shape of the lid or door against the exact corner where it will stand. A clever-looking item can still feel clumsy if it cannot open without bumping a wall.

Storage special offers in this category cover more than one style, from compact boxes to sturdy cabinets and bench units. That range lets you choose by shape, material and opening style rather than by guesswork. The best fit often comes from small differences: a wider mouth, a lower base, a firmer lid, a slimmer side. Those details make storage feel sorted, not squeezed.

And when the right form turns up at a lower price, it is easier to spot why it works. The space looks clearer. The items stay together. The garden feels less scattered, and the storage does what it was meant to do without shouting about it.