Searching for cane furniture in India usually means wading through a dozen tabs: a big global retailer here, a marketplace listing there, a local cane shop down the road, and a handful of homegrown brands. They all promise "natural rattan", but the build quality, the binding, and whether the piece survives an Indian summer can be very different. This guide compares the main places people actually buy rattan, cane, bamboo and wicker furniture in 2026, so you can pick with your eyes open.
We have kept it fair and factual. Every option below has a real place in the market, and we name what each one is genuinely good at. We make handmade cane and rattan decor ourselves, so we will be upfront about where Akway fits and where another source might suit you better. No invented prices, no manufactured complaints.
If you are coming from a Reddit-style question like "what are good furniture brands for modern Indian homes", the short version is this: there is no single best brand for everyone. The right choice depends on whether you want handmade and customisable, mass-produced and cheap, or somewhere in between, and crucially, whether the weave is bound with real cane or plastic. That last point trips up a lot of buyers. Two pieces can look identical in a photo, but the one with genuine cane binding will still look good in five years while the plastic-wrapped one starts to slacken after the first hot, humid summer. Knowing which is which before you pay is most of the battle.
Quick comparison
A side-by-side look at where you can buy rattan and cane furniture in India, and what each source is known for.
| Brand / source | Known for | Handmade | Custom orders |
|---|---|---|---|
| Akway | Handmade rattan, cane and bamboo decor and lighting | Yes, by artisan families | Yes |
| IKEA | Affordable flat-pack rattan and bamboo basics | No, factory-made | No |
| Marketplaces (Amazon, Pepperfry, Flipkart) | Huge range from many sellers, fast delivery | Varies by seller | Rarely |
| Local cane shops | Repairs, re-caning, regional styles | Often yes | Sometimes |
What to look for in a cane furniture brand
Before you compare brands, it helps to know what separates a piece that lasts a decade from one that sags in a year. Run any rattan or cane purchase through this checklist.
- Binding material: ask whether the weave is bound with natural cane or plastic. This is the single biggest quality signal.
- Frame: a solid wood or seasoned bamboo frame holds shape far better than thin hollow tubing.
- Joinery: tight, well-wrapped joints that do not wobble when you press on them.
- Finish: an even, smooth coat with no rough fibres or sharp ends poking out of the weave.
- Customisation: whether the maker can adjust size, colour or finish to your room.
- Shipping and returns: who handles delivery, and what happens if it arrives damaged.
The options, compared
Here is an honest look at each source, what it does well, and who it suits.
Akway
Akway is a homegrown brand built around handmade rattan, cane, bamboo and wicker pieces. Every item is woven by a network of more than 50 artisan families across India, using natural cane binding rather than plastic, so the weave stays tight as it ages. The catalogue leans toward lighting and home decor: pendant lamps, wall sconces, table lamps, storage baskets and serving pieces, the kind of natural-fibre accents that warm up a modern Indian home without taking over the room. Because the work is done by hand, no two pieces are perfectly identical, and that slight variation is part of the character.
Custom orders are part of the service, so if a standard size or finish does not fit your room, the artisans can weave to your spec. Shipping is free across India, and because you are buying from one brand rather than a pool of sellers, the quality is consistent from order to order. If you want a piece that is genuinely handmade, supports craft livelihoods, and is built to last, this is the niche Akway sits in. It is less suited to anyone who needs large case furniture or wants the rock-bottom price of a flat-pack item.
IKEA
IKEA is the obvious starting point for affordable, design-forward basics, and it stocks a rotating range of rattan and bamboo items. The strengths are clear: low, predictable prices, a consistent modern look, and the convenience of buying in-store or online in the cities IKEA serves. The catalogue is well photographed, sizes are listed clearly, and you generally know what you are getting before it arrives.
The trade-offs follow from the model. These are factory-made, flat-pack pieces, so they are not handmade and customisation is not really an option, what you see is what you get. Stock rotates, so a piece you like may not be available next season, and IKEA's physical reach in India is still limited to a few cities. For a renter or anyone furnishing on a tight budget who wants a clean Scandinavian look, IKEA is a sensible pick. Just check the binding before you buy, because a good deal of factory rattan uses synthetic weave that will not age the way natural cane does.
Marketplaces (Amazon, Pepperfry, Flipkart)
Marketplaces give you the widest selection and the fastest delivery, with thousands of cane, rattan and bamboo listings from many different sellers. That breadth is the appeal and also the catch: quality varies enormously from one seller to the next, because you are buying from whoever lists the product, not a single brand with one standard. Reviews and photos help, but it is hard to know whether the weave is natural cane or plastic until it arrives. Marketplaces work well when you know exactly what you want and you check seller ratings carefully. They are less reliable when you want consistent, handmade quality or any kind of customisation.
Local cane shops
Your neighbourhood cane shop is often underrated. Many are run by skilled craftspeople who can repair and re-cane old chairs, make regional styles you will not find online, and sometimes take custom orders. You can see and touch the piece before buying, and you support a local maker directly. The trade-offs are availability and consistency: ranges are small, design tends to be traditional, and there is usually no website, no delivery network, and no formal returns. If you have a good cane shop nearby and want repairs or a one-off, it is a great option. For a wider modern range delivered to your door, you will look elsewhere.
Akway handcrafted furniture
A few of our most-loved handmade rattan and cane pieces, each woven by Indian artisan families with natural cane binding. Prices start from the figures shown and shipping is free across India.

Rattan & Bamboo Table Lamp - Quana
Hand-woven bedside lamp that throws a warm, patterned glow. Natural cane over a solid frame.
From Rs 2,899
Shop Now
A statement cane pendant for the living or dining room, woven to keep its shape for years.
From Rs 3,499
Shop Now
A handmade bamboo wall sconce that adds texture and soft light to a bedroom or hallway.
From Rs 2,899
Shop Now
Natural raffia pendant with an airy, organic weave that suits boho and Japandi rooms.
From Rs 2,999
Shop Now
A compact handwoven jute pendant, an easy first piece if you are new to natural-fibre decor.
From Rs 1,699
Shop NowHow to judge quality
Whichever source you buy from, the same handful of details tell you whether a rattan or cane piece is well made.
- Natural vs plastic binding: natural cane has slight colour variation and a matte, fibrous feel; plastic weave looks uniform, shiny and a little too perfect. Natural cane stays tight, plastic loosens.
- Solid wood or bamboo frame: press on the frame. A solid, seasoned frame stays firm. Thin hollow tubing flexes and eventually cracks.
- Joinery: check where pieces meet. Joints should be tightly wrapped and wobble-free, with no visible glue blobs or gaps.
- Finish: run a hand over the weave. A good finish is smooth and even, with no loose fibres, splinters or sharp cut ends.
Price ranges & value
What you can expect to spend, and where the value lies, across rattan and cane furniture in India.
- Budget: mass-produced and flat-pack pieces are the cheapest, but often use plastic weave, so factor in a shorter lifespan.
- Mid-range: handmade decor and lighting from homegrown brands sits in the middle and usually lasts far longer per rupee spent.
- Premium and custom: made-to-order cane pieces cost more upfront but are built to your room and your taste, which is hard to put a price on.
- Value tip: a slightly pricier piece with natural cane binding and a solid frame is cheaper over five years than a cheap plastic-weave item you replace twice.
- Hidden costs: factor in delivery and the risk of damage in transit on larger pieces. A brand that ships free and handles damaged-on-arrival cases removes a cost that is easy to overlook at checkout.
The cheapest option is rarely the best value with natural-fibre furniture. Cane and rattan are working materials that flex, breathe and respond to their environment, so build quality shows up over years, not days. Spending a little more on real binding and a proper frame almost always pays back in how long the piece stays usable and good-looking.










