
Sylvox
Sylvox specializes in outdoor televisions and weatherproof TV solutions designed for patios, gardens, decks, and other exterior spaces, along with related mounting and digital streaming accessories. They are notable for serving homeowners and businesses seeking durable, all-weather entertainment displays that can withstand harsh environmental conditions while maintaining picture quality.
Your backyard just became the ultimate entertainment destination year-round
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Dusk Lights
Dusk Lights is a UK-based online-only retailer specialising in exterior and garden lighting. The catalogue spans wall lanterns, bollards, spike spots, decking lights and full low-voltage kits, with most lines priced between £25 and £180—solidly mid-range with a small premium tier of solid-brass and marine-grade fittings up to £350. All sales are processed through dusklights.co.uk; the company holds no physical stores but ships nationwide next-day from Midlands stock.
The brand positions itself as the “outdoor lighting problem-solver”: every luminaire is photographed at night, beam angles and IP ratings are clearly charted, and most products are bundled with matched bulbs, connectors or 3-pin plugs ready for DIY install. Their modular low-voltage “Plug & Play” system—sold in expandable 3 m starter kits—is the best-known range and accounts for the bulk of repeat purchases.
Core buyers are 30-55-year-old homeowners who want a professionally lit garden without hiring an electrician; they value clear guidance, fast delivery and a 2-year no-quibble return policy. The aesthetic leans traditional-cottage (black aluminium, warm 3000 K) rather than ultra-modern, appealing to suburban families who entertain outdoors and treat lighting as seasonal décor.
Competition comes from mass-market DIY chains on price and from high-end design studios on specification; Dusk Lights differentiates by focusing exclusively on exterior lighting, keeping technical data transparent and offering live-chat advice from installers 7 days a week.
Your garden, lit like a pro, installed like a breeze
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Avlounge
Avlounge.co.uk retails a tightly curated range of home-entertainment furniture—motorised TV stands, ceiling lifts, pop-up cabinet mechanisms, floating wall panels and integrated soundbar shelves—priced from £299 for a basic bracket to £2,500 for a full motorised media-wall set. All goods are sold D2C through the UK site; there is no physical showroom, but nationwide installation is offered at checkout.
The brand’s USP is “invisible tech” furniture: units that hide or reveal screens at the press of a remote, letting living rooms revert to a minimalist state when the TV is off. Its best-known line is the Ascend range—British-engineered lift systems with 160 kg capacity, 200 mm vertical travel and IR/RF handset compatibility—backed by a five-year motor warranty.
Core buyers are 30-55-year-old homeowners, architects and boutique AV installers who want large TVs without visual dominance. Customers value space-saving design, child-safe screen storage and the ability to match oak, walnut or matte-lacquer fronts to existing décor.
Avlounge competes in the niche between mass-market wall-mount brands and ultra-high-end custom joinery shops. It differentiates by offering plug-and-play motorised furniture at mid-premium prices, supplying detailed CAD drawings for installers and holding UK stock for 48-hour delivery—speed and specification flexibility the mass brands cannot match and the bespoke ateliers rarely match at this price.
Your living room, minus the television, whenever you choose
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Cello Electronics
Cello Electronics sells LED TVs (16-75 in), smart-TV sticks, and small domestic appliances such as microwaves and mini-fridges. Sets are priced £99-£1,199, sitting in the budget-to-mid segment below the £1,500+ flagships of major labels. Products are stocked in UK high-street retailers (Argos, Very, Littlewoods, Asda, Tesco) and shipped direct through celloelectronics.com and Amazon UK.
The brand’s USP is “British-designed, European-assembled” TVs that carry Freeview Play, satellite tuners, and built-in DVD players in one chassis—features rarely combined by global makers. Cello was first to market a 12-volt caravan TV and still dominates the motor-home and HGV screen niche; its 4K Smart Fire TV Edition range is a consistent top-10 seller on Argos.co.uk.
Core buyers are cost-conscious families upgrading a second set, caravan/cabin owners needing 12 V or 24 V models, and older viewers who want simple remotes with large buttons plus UK call-centre support. Value, straightforward operation, and after-sales service in Hull appeal to shoppers who avoid complex menus and premium price tags.
Cello competes with low-cost European and Asian OEM brands that rebadge generic panels; it differentiates by keeping design, firmware, and customer support in-house in the UK, allowing rapid software updates and niche sizing (16-32 in) the big factories ignore.
British-built TVs that do more, cost less, and come with a real person answering the phone
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Albiongarden
Albiongarden sells British-made cold-frame greenhouses, raised beds, and kitchen-garden accessories in cedar and aluminum. Price span runs mid-range to premium: £249 for a 2’ x 3’ cold frame up to £1,499 for a 6’ x 4’ Victorian-style glasshouse, all sold only through the brand’s own UK and US e-commerce sites.
Every structure is CNC-cut in Shropshire from FSC-certified Western Red Cedar, then shipped flat-pack with stainless-steel hardware and a 10-year wood-rot guarantee. The modular “Cedar-Frame System” lets gardeners stack or extend units without tools, a feature widely referenced in RHS-show coverage and Gardeners’ World magazine.
Customers are 30-55-year-old suburban and semi-rural homeowners who want year-round salad crops but dislike plastic or imported metal. They value heritage aesthetics, low-carbon UK manufacture, and Instagram-ready design that sits neatly on a patio rather than a full allotment plot.
Albiongarden competes with mass-market aluminum greenhouses and imported timber cold frames by emphasizing domestic sourcing, tool-free assembly, and furniture-grade finish. Where rivals sell utilitarian grow-houses, Albiongarden positions its products as outdoor furniture that also happens to micro-climate vegetables.
British-made cedar greenhouses that turn your garden into a year-round pantry
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Jack Stonehouse
Jack Stonehouse sells domestic heating, cooling and air-treatment appliances together with a growing range of outdoor leisure gear such as pizza ovens, firepits and patio heaters. Price points sit in the accessible-to-mid bracket: most electric stoves, radiators and evaporative coolers retail £70-£250, while larger gas patio heaters and multi-function pizza ovens peak around £450-£550. The company trades exclusively through its own UK-based webstore and Amazon UK, with no physical showrooms.
The brand’s USP is rapid, design-led adaptation of continental-style appliances for British homes: slimline glass-panel infrared heaters, “no-flue” bio-ethanol baskets and dual-fuel pizza ovens that switch from wood to gas in under five minutes. Best-known lines include the 2000 W “Chelsea” electric stove (consistently a top-10 Amazon heater) and the modular “Stonehouse Fire-Circle” that converts from a firepit to a cooking hub. Products are developed in-house, shipped direct from Far-East partner factories and carry CE/UKCA certification.
Core buyers are 30-55 year-old suburban homeowners who want atmospheric, Instagram-ready garden features without the cost or permanence of built-in solutions. They value quick set-up, clean storage and the flexibility to heat, cook or entertain as seasons change; environmental concerns are secondary to convenience and visual impact.
Jack Stonehouse competes with mass-market catalogue brands and marketplace sellers that import similar unbadged appliances. It differentiates by bundling UK-specific accessories (regulators, weather covers, recipe books), offering 24-month warranties handled by a Yorkshire-based service team, and refreshing SKUs every six months to stay ahead of generic dropshippers.
Continental style, British gardens, zero commitment heating
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Skyworth
Skyworth sells LED, OLED and QLED televisions (32-86 in.), set-top boxes, smart-home displays, commercial digital-signage and OEM components. TVs span budget HD models from ≈US$200 to premium 8K OLED wall-mounts above US$3,000; commercial panels climb higher. Products are distributed through brand stores, major appliance chains, e-commerce marketplaces and direct B2B contracts in 100-plus countries.
The company is one of the world’s top-five TV shippers by volume and the largest ODM maker of Android TV boards, giving it end-to-end control from panel assembly to software. Its proprietary Coolita OS, AI image chips and in-house OLED mass-production line let it deliver high-spec sets at aggressive prices. Flagship W and S series OLEDs and the budget-friendly A series are widely recognized for built-in Google services and gaming-friendly 120 Hz panels.
Buyers are value-oriented tech adopters who want flagship visuals without paying first-tier premiums: middle-class families upgrading to 4K/8K, console gamers seeking HDMI 2.1 on a budget, and hospitality or education procurement teams needing reliable large displays. The brand appeals to practical consumers who prioritize screen performance, smart connectivity and two-year warranties over luxury badges.
Skyworth competes in the crowded Android-TV space against global volume leaders and Chinese value specialists. It differentiates by vertically integrating panel, chipset and OS development, allowing faster feature rollouts and 10-20 % lower retail prices than comparably specced rivals, while offering localized after-sales networks in emerging markets where many low-cost competitors have minimal service presence.
Premium picture quality without the premium price tag
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