Bar Carts

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Featured

Luxembourg Bar Cart w/ Wheels

Fermob

19 options available

$1,447.00

Lager Trolley

Ferm Living

$925.00

Exit Trolley

Design House Stockholm

2 options available

$835.00

Bauhaus Trolley

Kristina Dam

2 options available

$799.00

Carlo Rattan Bar Cart - Exterior

Sika Design

$1,375.00

Romeo Trolley

Sika Design

2 options available

$748.00

James Bar Cart

Sika Design

2 options available

$1,573.00

Carlo Rattan Bar Cart

Sika Design

2 options available

$795.00

Roll Bar Trolley With Teak

Cane Line

$1,665.00

Roll Trolley

Cane Line

$870.00

Flow Trolley - 3 Layer

Muuto

2 options available

$859.00

Tea Trolley 900 by Alvar Aalto

Artek

2 options available

$6,105.00

HB 128 Bar Cart

Lange Production

2 options available

$3,800.00

Franco Albini Frattelino Trolley

Sika Design

$1,430.00

Frame Trolley/Bar Cart

Cane Line

$1,390.00

Rapson Bar Cart

Loll Designs

9 options available

$1,295.00

Mategot Trolley

Gubi

$1,199.00

Tea Trolley 901

Artek

3 options available

$3,870.00

Bar Carts

Bar Carts That Actually Matter: A Look at HORNE's Collection

Okay, so modern bar carts. I never thought I'd be someone who cared about bar carts, but here we are. After hosting a few too many parties where I spent half the night shuttling drinks back and forth like some sort of cocktail sherpa, I finally get it. HORNE's got this collection that's... well, it's actually worth talking about.

Here's the Deal with These Carts

Look, most bar carts are basically expensive TV trays. But these? They're different. Take Fermob – those folks know what they're doing. Their carts come in like 24 colors (who needs 24 colors? Apparently, I do), and they hold up outside without looking like deck furniture from 1982.

Then there's Lange Productions. Their stuff has this weight to it – you know how some furniture feels substantial and some feels like it's going to tip over if you look at it wrong? These are the substantial ones. The brass details don't feel cheap, and honestly, they get better-looking with age. Which is more than I can say for most things.

The Good Stuff from Good Brands

Cane Line makes carts that survive actual weather. Rain, sun, that weird hail we got last spring – doesn't matter. Still looks good. Gubi's pieces are for when you want people to think you know what you're doing. Clean lines, fancy but not pretentious.

Muuto – now that's interesting. Their carts work everywhere. I've literally seen the same cart in someone's kitchen and then at their friend's place on the deck, and it looked right both times. Magic? Maybe. More likely just smart design.

And Fermob with those colors. Finally, someone who understands that not everything needs to be black or white or "natural wood tone." Sometimes you want a bright blue bar cart. Life's too short for beige everything.

Actually Built to Last (For Real)

Here's something that bugs me – companies that claim their stuff is durable but then it falls apart after a season. These brands actually mean it. Cane Line uses materials that laugh at bad weather. Fermob's doing interesting things with recycled materials too, which is nice because, you know, the planet.

I've had friends who bought cheap modern bar carts from places I won't name, and they're basically replacing them every couple years. That gets expensive fast. These might cost more upfront, but they stick around.

The Ones I'd Actually Buy

If I had to pick (and my wife says I can only have one because apparently we don't have unlimited space):

Fermob Luxembourg Trolley – Those colors! Plus it's practically bulletproof
Lange Productions Bar Cart – Classic in the best way. My grandmother would approve • Cane Line Roll Trolley – For when you want to park it outside and forget about it
Muuto Flow Trolley – Clean, simple, doesn't scream "LOOK AT MY BAR CART"
Gubi Matégot Bar Cart – French design that makes you feel fancier than you are

Making It All Work

So you get a cart. Great. Now what? It can't just float there by itself. You need other stuff – tables that don't clash, chairs people actually want to sit in, places to put things that aren't on the cart. HORNE's got these collections that work together, which is helpful because I'm terrible at matching things.

The whole point is making people want to hang out at your place. And honestly? A good bar cart is like a conversation starter. People gravitate toward it. "What's in this bottle?" "Can you make me one of those?" Before you know it, everyone's gathered around, and that's when the good times happen.

Shop around HORNE's collection – these carts might actually change how you entertain. Or at least make you look like you know what you're doing.