It started way back, okay not so far back, let’s say 2019 in sunny Santa Barbara. There we were sitting around with friends and family…could have been at a campsite, on the beach, on the sidelines of a kid’s soccer game, or all of the above. Bummer was, the chairs we had simply weren't comfortable, not to mention a pain to set up and lug around. Trust us, we tried every chair on the market. The big, the bad, the ugly. And don’t get us started with tent poles. We think those should be for tents, not chairs.
$99.99
CLIQ Chair is a sturdy, comfortable, portable chair that rapidly packs up to the size of a water bottle.
• Set up in seconds. No tent poles.
• Incredibly compact. Surprisingly comfy.
• Perfect for on the go socializing, spectating, and sitting just about anywhere
• Holds up to 300lbs
• FREE 2-Chair carrying bag with purchase

So, we decided to start a better outdoor chair company. We assembled a top-notch team with expertise in product design, engineering, and customer service. We tinkered and tested, invented and filed patents, until it all just CLIQed.
Today, CLIQ is making outdoor chairs that are as much fun to set up as they are to sit in. Easy to set up and take down. Amazingly comfortable and durable. Perfectly portable and packable. And because we believe the best measure of sustainability is making a product that lasts, we’ve built CLIQ to stand (or should we say sit) the test of time.
$199.99
High back. Higher comfort.
• Ridiculously relaxing. Full head and neck support for portable lounging bliss.
• Set up in seconds. No tent poles.
• Precision engineered for over-the-top comfort. Even a puffy pillow!
• Extra roomy carrying bag & cupholder included.

For those who need a camping chair with the lowest possible weight, ultralight chairs use lighter materials and efficient design to achieve weights of half a pound or less. These chairs tend to be marketed at backpackers who want to shave as much weight as possible off of their packs.
Some tent-pole style chairs achieve this by using lightweight materials like aluminum alloys or even carbon fiber for the chair frame and mesh or tech fabrics for the seat itself. But many ultralight chairs get their weight by stripping away features and support, which unfortunately makes them much less comfortable than other camping chair types. Some models common in this category are essentially folding pads placed on the ground that get users off the dirt and offer a little back support but not much else; others are two or three legged stools that are less stable to sit on and do not have seatbacks.
