The Loloi II Easton ESN-06 is the design-forward pick in the lineup — power-loomed in Turkey from a 93/7 polypropylene-polyester blend, with a genuinely reversible two-tone pattern that lets you flip seasons or refresh a tired-looking side. The 5'-3"x7'-6" lands around $200; the 7'-10"x10' runs $400-500. Loloi's design partnerships make this the rug to buy when you want a polypropylene rug that doesn't look like a polypropylene rug.

Full review
Build Quality and Pile
Loloi power-looms the Easton in Turkey from a 93% polypropylene / 7% polyester blend. The construction story is in the consistency — Turkish power-looming runs tighter and more uniform than the Indian and Chinese machine-looming common in cheaper outdoor rugs. Wayfair and Annie & El reviewers consistently flagged the reversible weave as well-aligned, with the second-side pattern reading as sharp as the primary. There's no backing — both faces are finished flatweave, which is what makes the reversibility usable. The Sabina and Beach House have a latex back that wouldn't lie comfortably face-up.
Pile is low flatweave under a quarter inch, which makes the rug easy to clean and trips no thresholds. The trade-off is feel — Loloi's own messaging describes it as 'definitely functional over plush,' and reviewers who wanted soft underfoot were the most negative. Anyone evaluating this rug for a covered patio or a high-traffic indoor mudroom will find the construction matches the use case; anyone evaluating it for poolside lounging should look at the Ruggable instead.
Reversibility and Design
Reversibility is the headline feature. The ESN-06 colorway gives Ivory/Green on one face and the inverse on the reverse — flip seasonally, or flip when one side gets dirt-tracked, or flip when you redo the patio furniture. The other 10 ESN colorways follow the same pattern (Coffee/Dove, Denim/Ivory, Teal/Fog, Wheat/Ivory, Onyx/Ivory, etc.). Loloi's reputation for designer-level pattern work shows up in the Easton's two-tone graphics — they read as curated rather than mass-market. This is why the Easton commands a premium over the visually similar nuLOOM Sabina.
Weather Resistance and UV Fade
Polypropylene is inherently UV-resistant and moisture-resistant, and the Easton's spec sheet calls for hose-off cleaning and air-drying outside, the standard polypropylene-rug care. Loloi doesn't publish a specific fade-resistance grade, and there's less long-term review data on the Easton than on the older Sabina or Beach House lines (both have years of customer review accumulation), so full-sun multi-year fade behavior is partly inference from the fiber base. On covered patios and screened porches the construction should track with the rest of the polypropylene tier — multi-season color retention with no mildew.
Size and Coverage Options
The Easton ships in 7 sizes: 18x18-inch sample swatch, 2'-3"x3'-9" accent, 4'-0"x6'-0", 5'-3"x7'-6", 6'-7"x9'-4", 7'-10"x10' (the standard 8x10 equivalent), and 8'-6"x11'-6" (the standard 9x12 equivalent). That's fewer than the nuLOOM Sabina's 12 sizes but covers the standard patio footprints. The 5'-3"x7'-6" is the entry-level patio size, the 6'-7"x9'-4" fits a 6-seat dining table, and the 7'-10"x10' covers a full pergola seating arrangement. Loloi's wholesale pricing varies by retailer — Amazon lists the 5'-3"x7'-6" ESN-06 around $200 and the 8'-6"x11'-6" around $600.
Aesthetic and Design Variety
Eleven colorways span neutral (Wheat/Ivory, Dove/Coffee, Fog/Teal) through bolder (Onyx/Ivory, Denim/Ivory, Green/Ivory). The geometric two-tone graphic reads as designer-curated — Loloi's design partnerships put more thought into pattern scale and color contrast than typical mass-market polypropylene work. This is the pick for someone who's hesitated on outdoor rugs because they all look the same; the Easton actually looks like an indoor designer rug that happens to handle weather.
Washability and Cleaning
Hose off and let it air dry outside is the Loloi-recommended cleaning routine. No backing means water drains through and the rug dries faster than a latex-backed competitor — useful on covered porches where water pooling between cleanings is a mildew risk. For deep stains Loloi recommends professional cleaning rather than home spot-treatment, which is more conservative than the nuLOOM Sabina's spot-treat-with-carpet-cleaner instruction. Vacuum without a beater bar to avoid pulling at the weave.
The no-backing construction is the cleaning advantage that compounds over time. Latex-backed rugs trap dirt, pollen, and pet hair between the rug and the deck surface; the Easton's open flatweave doesn't. Periodic flipping is also a cleaning lever — if one side gets dirt-tracked, flipping to the clean side buys time before the next hose cycle. Reviewers in the first year of ownership consistently flagged cleaning as low-friction relative to other polypropylene rugs they'd owned previously. Drying time after a full hose-down typically runs 1-3 hours in direct sun and 4-6 hours in shade, which is faster than any latex-backed alternative in this lineup and meaningfully shorter than the Ruggable Josephine's commercial-dryer cycle.
Where It Falls Short
Three issues. First, price scaling — the 5'-3"x7'-6" is competitively priced at around $200, but the 7'-10"x10' lands $400-500 depending on retailer, putting it above the nuLOOM Sabina 8x10 ($358) and well above the Safavieh Beach House 8x10 ($194). Second, flatness on unpacking — Wayfair reviewers reported the rolled rug took several days under weights to lie completely flat, common to thicker outdoor rugs but worth knowing. Third, the pile-firmness trade-off — this is a functional flatweave, not a plush turf.
Who It's Best For
Buy the Easton if you want a designer-look polypropylene rug, you want true reversibility, and you'll pay the premium for the better construction and pattern work. The 5'-3"x7'-6" is the value sweet spot. Skip it if you need a 10x14 (it doesn't make that size, the Sabina does), if your budget caps at $250 for an 8x10 (look at the Safavieh BHS218), or if you need a softer barefoot feel (Ruggable). The reversibility advantage over the Sabina and Beach House is real but specific — buyers who'll actually flip the rug get value from it; buyers who'll lay it once and leave it should weigh that feature accordingly.
How It Compares to Alternatives
Versus the Mad Mats Mix Tropical, both reverse, but the Easton's two-tone graphic looks like a designer indoor rug while the Mad Mats reads as casual-cabana plastic weave. Mad Mats is half the price at small sizes; the Easton is the right pick when the rug is the design statement of the patio. Versus the nuLOOM Sabina, the Easton trades fewer sizes (7 vs 12) and a higher price for reversibility and tighter Turkish weave consistency. Versus the Safavieh Beach House, the Easton is roughly 2-3x the price for materially better construction and pattern work — appropriate if you want the rug to last beyond the Beach House's 2-3 year horizon.
Versus the Ruggable Josephine Sunrise, the Easton swaps machine washability and saturated print for reversibility and a quieter geometric palette. The Ruggable wins on cleaning convenience; the Easton wins on flexibility and on costing $100-200 less at comparable sizes. For households without pets or small children, the cleaning convenience matters less and the Easton math gets stronger.
Long-Term Durability
Turkish power-looming runs tighter than the Indian and Chinese machine-looming common in cheaper polypropylene rugs, which translates to longer weave integrity. There's less aggregate review data on the Easton than on long-established lines like the Beach House or Sabina, but Wayfair, Layla Grayce, and Amazon reviewers in the first year of ownership are consistently flagging the rug as well-constructed and stable under high-traffic use. Polypropylene fiber base means UV behavior tracks with the rest of the polypropylene tier — multi-year color retention under cover, faster fade in direct unfiltered sun.
Loloi's brand reputation in the design trade is a meaningful tertiary signal — Loloi rugs ship into interior-design projects where the rug needs to perform for years without intervention. The brand has years of reputation behind power-loomed indoor lines, and the Easton extends that construction discipline to the indoor-outdoor category. Reversibility is the under-appreciated long-term lever: if one face wears or stains, you flip and double the useful life of the rug. That effective lifespan multiplier doesn't show up in spec sheets but shows up in real-world cost-per-year math.
Strengths
- +Genuinely reversible — two distinct colorways on the same rug for seasonal flipping
- +93% polypropylene / 7% polyester power-loomed in Turkey for tight weave consistency
- +Seven sizes from 2'-3"x3'-9" accent through 8'-6"x11'-6" plus a sample swatch
- +No backing means it dries fast after a hose rinse and works on grass or paver patios
- +Loloi's design partnerships give the Easton a stronger aesthetic point of view than mass-market polypropylene rugs
Watch-outs
- −Pricing climbs sharply at larger sizes — the 7'-10"x10' lands around $400-500
- −Power-loomed polypropylene is functional, not plush — buyers expecting softness were the most disappointed
- −Ships rolled and can take several days under weights to lie completely flat
How it compares
The Easton is the design pick vs the nuLOOM Sabina's neutral trellis and the Safavieh Beach House's coastal stripe — Loloi's pattern reads more curated. It also reverses, which the Sabina and Beach House don't. The Mad Mats Mix Tropical also reverses but is woven from recycled plastic ribbon (very different look). Pricewise the Easton sits between the Sabina ($358 at 8x10) and the Ruggable Josephine ($569 cover at 8x10).
Who this is for
At a glance: Buyers who want a designer-look polypropylene rug with the practical benefit of a flippable second pattern.
Why you’d buy the Loloi II Easton ESN-06 Ivory/Green Reversible Indoor/Outdoor Rug
- Genuinely reversible — two distinct colorways on the same rug for seasonal flipping.
- 93% polypropylene / 7% polyester power-loomed in Turkey for tight weave consistency.
- Seven sizes from 2'-3"x3'-9" accent through 8'-6"x11'-6" plus a sample swatch.
Why you’d skip it
- Pricing climbs sharply at larger sizes — the 7'-10"x10' lands around $400-500.
- Power-loomed polypropylene is functional, not plush — buyers expecting softness were the most disappointed.
- Ships rolled and can take several days under weights to lie completely flat.
Rating sources
“Easton is power-loomed of polypropylene in Turkey for utmost durability and ease of cleaning.”
“Well-made, durable rug with an attractive design that's perfect for a high-traffic indoor area or a covered outdoor space.”
“Indoor/outdoor area rug with reversible two-toned graphic pattern for backyard patios, decks, and porches.”
Our 4.5 score is the average of these published ratings. Ratings marked * were derived from the reviewer’s written analysis or video transcript — the publisher didn’t print an explicit numeric score, so we inferred one from their own words. Click through to verify. More about methodology.



