The coffee table is the most looked at surface in most UK living rooms. Whether you are watching television, having a coffee with a friend or simply walking through, your eye lands on it. Styling it well does not mean cluttering it. It means understanding what the surface is doing and giving each element a job.
Styling can only do so much if the table itself is the wrong shape or scale. A round table softens a room with many straight lines and works well where children are involved, since there are no sharp corners. A rectangular table suits a longer sofa. A square table sits comfortably with a corner sofa. Our coffee tables range covers the full set of common shapes.
A tray is the single most useful styling tool. It contains smaller objects, defines a zone on the table and makes the surface easy to clear when the room is in use. A wooden tray softens a glass top, while a brass or marble tray adds a quiet metallic note on a timber surface. Keep the size in proportion to the table itself, roughly a third of the top.
Two or three books that you genuinely enjoy looking at do more than a styled pile of unread coffee table books. Choose covers that work with the room. Stack them horizontally to create a small plinth that can hold a candle, a small sculpture or a vase. The point is for the books to feel like yours rather than purely decorative.
A small plant or a stem in a slim vase brings life to the table without taking it over. Avoid anything tall enough to interrupt the view across the room when you are sitting on the sofa. A trailing succulent, a few branches in a glass vessel or a single seasonal flower works well. Our vases selection includes pieces in heights that suit coffee tables specifically.
A common mistake is to try to match colours across the table. It tends to look staged. A more relaxed result comes from mixing materials. A ceramic bowl alongside a wooden tray, a marble coaster set beside a glass vessel and a small brass object together feel collected rather than coordinated. If the table itself is a strong material, such as marble or polished stone, keep the accessories quieter. Have a look at our marble and stone coffee tables for examples where the table is the feature.
Negative space is part of the design. A surface that is fully covered reads as cluttered no matter how lovely each individual piece is. Aim to keep around half of the table top clear at any one time. This also leaves room for everyday use, which is, in the end, what the table is for.
One of the quiet pleasures of styling a coffee table is changing it through the year. In spring, a small jug of garden cuttings. In summer, a glass bowl of fruit or shells. In autumn, a chunky candle and a sculptural piece. In winter, a stack of throws on the sofa and something warmer toned on the table itself. Small changes keep the room feeling considered without buying new furniture.
A glass top shows everything underneath, so a tray or a runner gives the eye something to land on. A wooden top can take more layered styling, since the warmth of the timber softens busier objects. A high gloss top reflects light and benefits from a few sculptural pieces rather than many small ones. If you are still choosing, our wooden coffee tables are a forgiving starting point for layered styling. For a broader view of related living room pieces, you can visit Furniture in Fashion.
How many objects should sit on a coffee table?
A useful guide is three to five small groupings, each with a clear purpose. Anything beyond that tends to read as clutter.
Is it better to have a round or rectangular coffee table?
It depends on the sofa and the room. Round suits softer rooms and family use. Rectangular suits longer sofas and more formal layouts.
What goes on a coffee table besides books?
A tray, a candle, a small vase with a stem, a sculptural object and a single bowl for everyday items such as remotes or coasters.
Should the coffee table match the TV unit?
It does not need to match exactly. Pieces from the same material family, such as oak with oak, usually feel related without being identical.
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