Some rooms feel friendly the moment you step inside, while others feel sharp without an obvious reason. The cause is rarely the colour scheme or the lighting on its own. It is usually the layout. Furniture lines, edges, and groupings create a visual rhythm, and when that rhythm becomes too rigid, the entire space turns cool. Softening the arrangement is less about adding more pieces and more about choosing shapes that talk to each other in a kinder way.
A harsh layout often shares a few traits. Furniture is pushed flat against the walls, every piece sits at a strict ninety degrees to the next, and there is little visual variation across the room. The result is a space that looks tidy on paper but feels somehow uninhabited. Walking into such a layout can feel like entering a showroom rather than a home, and conversation in those rooms tends to fade quickly.
One of the simplest fixes is to mix frame profiles. If the main sofa has clean architectural lines, a single piece with rounded arms or a curved back will quietly relax the whole room. The piece does not need to be large. A small armchair with softer geometry can lift the energy of an entire scheme. Our tub chairs are a useful tool here, because their compact rounded silhouette interrupts a strict layout without crowding it.
Hard surfaces multiply tension. A glass table next to a leather sofa next to a polished sideboard will read busy and cool, even when the colours are calm. Adding fabric breaks the pattern. A linen weave on a sofa, a brushed velvet on a small chair, a chunky woven rug under the central seating, all of these pull the eye onto a softer surface and slow the room down. Designs from our fabric sofas range work especially well in homes that lean modern and need a little warmth to balance the finish.
Pushing every piece against the wall is one of the quickest ways to make a room feel rigid. A sofa pulled slightly forward, a chair angled towards a fireplace, a side table set on the diagonal, all of these introduce a softer choreography. The space behind the seating becomes a quiet pause, and the layout starts to feel composed rather than imposed. Even a few centimetres of breathing room behind a sofa can change the whole atmosphere.
Rugs do more than warm a floor. They set the boundary of a seating group and tie the surrounding shapes together. A rug that extends just under the front legs of the sofa and the chairs creates an invisible circle that the eye reads as one zone. We carry a wide range of rugs for this purpose, from pile weaves that introduce softness underfoot to flatter weaves that keep modern rooms feeling crisp. Pairing the rug with a round side table or two reinforces the calmer geometry.
If the layout still feels stiff after these changes, a single curved lounge piece can transform it. A chaise or curved armchair becomes a visual full stop that rounds off the edges of the room. Pieces from our lounge and chaise chairs selection were designed with this in mind, allowing one element to do the heavy lifting of softening the entire scheme.
Once the larger pieces feel right, smaller surfaces should echo the same logic. A tall slim side table next to a low rounded sofa will read awkward, while a similar scale table with curved edges or a drum base will join the conversation easily. Our side tables in pebble and oval shapes are popular for exactly this reason, because they sit alongside larger furniture without creating fresh tension.
Open plan rooms often suffer from too many parallel lines. Try angling at least one major piece, adding a round form, and introducing a soft textile to break up the visual rhythm.
Yes. A well placed armchair with a different profile from the rest of the seating can shift the whole feel of a room without any other changes.
No. Mixing rounded shapes with cleaner lined ones produces the most balanced result. Too many soft pieces can read undefined.
Very. The rug grounds a seating group, ties the shapes together, and adds a layer of texture that hard surfaces cannot deliver on their own.
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