Western Cuddler Recliners
Cuddler recliners are the seat everyone ends up in—generous scale, sink-in comfort, and a look that still feels tailored. These Western loungers add warmth and atmosphere to a room without turning it into a theme. Big comfort, clean presence.
Bitterroot Hide Cuddler Recliner
Rio Lobo Brindle Cuddler Recliner
Outrider Croc Cuddler Recliner
Western Cuddler Recliners Made to Steal the Show
The Chair That Hugs You Back
• Generous comfort: space to stretch out without looking sloppy
• Materials you can live on: leather and textiles built for daily use
• A silhouette with polish: oversized feel, composed look
Complete the look with Accent Tables and Pillows & Throws.
Delivery Details: Shipping & Return Policy and Customer Service & Delivery FAQ.
Western Soul, On The Page
Western Soul is the practical side of our brand—guides, materials knowledge, buying advice, and design thinking built for real Western homes. If you want to choose well (and avoid costly mistakes), this is your library: how to size furniture, how to build a room that feels grounded, how to care for leather and wood, and how to create a collected look without clutter.
You’ll find long-form articles designed to be genuinely useful—equal parts inspiration and instruction—so your home feels refined, functional, and unmistakably Western. This is where taste meets know-how, and where “what you love” becomes “what works.”
The Western Room That Ages Well
Learn what makes a Western room age well over time, from honest materials and strong silhouettes to restraint, texture, warmth, quality, and long-term design judgment.
Designing a Western Home for Conversation
Learn how to design a Western home that actually encourages people to gather, linger, and talk. This guide covers seating layout, lighting, texture, acoustics, and the details that make rooms feel socially alive.
How to Use Western Furniture in a Transitional Home
Learn how to use Western furniture in a transitional home without making the room feel themed, heavy, or confused. This guide covers silhouette, palette, texture, balance, and restraint.
Read moreabout How to Use Western Furniture in a Transitional Home
The Most Expensive-Looking Material Pairings
Learn the material pairings that make a Western home look refined, layered, and expensive, from leather and linen to iron, wool, wood, copper, and stone.































