Furniture in Fashion Blog
Furniture in Fashion Blog
Furniture in Fashion Blog
Not every home has a spare bedroom waiting to be turned into a walk in wardrobe. In most UK houses, the dressing routine has to coexist with sleeping, working or relaxing. The good news is that a graceful dressing area can be carved out of almost any layout, provided the right pieces work together. Below are five approaches that have proved themselves in flats, terraces and family homes alike.
1. Borrow a corner of the bedroom
A bedroom corner is the most common solution and often the most effective. Place a compact dressing table against one wall and a tall mirror at right angles to it. The reflection extends the corner visually, while the right lighting creates a sense of separation from the bed. Slim profile pieces from our dressing tables range slot into corners as narrow as 80 cm without crowding the room. Choose a finish that ties in with the wardrobe and bedside furniture so the corner reads as part of one scheme rather than an afterthought.
2. Use the landing or hallway
Wider Victorian landings and modern open hallways often hold more usable floor space than people realise. A shallow console can serve as a dressing surface, paired with a wall mounted mirror and a single drawer chest below. The advantage of a landing dressing area is natural light from a stair window and a routine that flows directly into getting out of the door. Just be mindful of traffic, and choose softer floor coverings to keep noise down. A small folded screen at the top of the stair adds a sense of privacy where it is needed.
3. Convert the wall in front of a wardrobe
If your bedroom has a fitted or freestanding wardrobe along one wall, the area immediately in front of it can become a dressing zone. The wardrobe doors act as a backdrop, while a low stool, a mirror and a slim tray on top of a chest complete the setup. The look is calm and unified, since everything sits within one visual block. Pair freestanding pieces from our wardrobes collection with a tall floor mirror to anchor the corner and keep the routine close to where the clothes already live.
4. Divide a larger room with a screen
Bedsits, studios and large bedrooms benefit from a soft visual divide. A screen or open shelving unit creates a sense of enclosure without building a wall. Behind the screen, place the dressing table, the mirror and a chair. The screen itself can be slatted timber, rattan or upholstered fabric. Pieces in our room dividers range come in heights that suit both flats and family homes, and several models double as plant stands or display shelves on the open side.
5. Repurpose the chest of drawers you already own
The simplest route of all is to repurpose an existing chest. Clear the top, add a freestanding mirror and a small lamp, and treat the surface as your daily grooming station. A wide low chest works particularly well, since it allows space for a tray on one side and a seat on the other. If the current piece is too tall, too narrow or too deep for a comfortable routine, our wider catalogue at Furniture in Fashion covers most footprints in matching finishes.
Lighting brings each area together
Whichever route you choose, lighting decides whether the area feels like a thoughtful corner or a leftover patch of floor. Two warm sources at eye level usually flatter better than a single overhead bulb. A pivoting wall light or a slim lamp gives shadow free reflection, and a daylight balanced bulb above the mirror keeps colours true. Consider a dimmer switch so the same lighting can soften when the dressing area becomes part of the bedroom in the evening.
Mirrors do the heavy lifting
A generous mirror does more than reflect your outfit. It bounces light, doubles the perceived floor area and visually frames the corner. A leaning floor mirror is the easiest choice, since it requires no fixings and can be moved if the layout changes. For smaller spaces, a wall mounted oval or arched mirror keeps the look soft. Our cheval mirrors suit larger rooms, while compact wall pieces suit landings.
Keep the routine quietly contained
The final ingredient is discipline with storage. A single tray for daily jewellery, a closed box for makeup and a lidded basket for hair tools means the area can return to looking like furniture within a minute. The aim is a space that supports the routine but never announces it.
FAQ
How much floor space do I need?
A workable dressing area can fit into a footprint of around 90 by 60 cm, provided the mirror and lighting are set up well.
Do I need natural light?
Helpful but not essential. A daylight balanced bulb above the mirror does the same job for grooming.
Can a dressing area share with a home office?
Yes, with the right surface and clear storage. A separating tray for cosmetics keeps the two functions from blending.
What if my bedroom is too small for a dressing table?
Use the top of a chest of drawers, or place the mirror and stool on a landing or in a generous hallway.
How do I stop the area looking cluttered?
Limit visible items to three, store everything else in closed drawers and clear the surface at the end of each routine.

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