Shape is the detail people most often overlook when choosing a corner desk, yet it shapes how comfortable and useful the desk feels every day. Before you settle on a finish or a colour, it pays to understand how different corner layouts behave in a real room. Get the shape right and everything else falls into place.
A corner desk is defined by how its two surfaces meet. Some sit symmetrically, with equal wings on each side. Others extend further on one side, giving you a longer run for spreading out. The shape you need depends on how you work and which way your room opens. Choosing without thinking about this often leads to a desk that feels awkward, even when the desk itself is well made.
A balanced, symmetrical desk suits people who like a screen in the centre with equal space either side. It feels neat and orderly and works well in a square corner. This layout is common across our corner computer desks, and it is a sensible starting point if you are unsure, as it keeps your options open.
If you work across documents, a keyboard and a second screen at once, an L shaped layout gives you a longer surface on one side. This extra run is useful for writing by hand, reviewing papers or simply keeping things within reach. You can see this approach reflected in our wider computer desks range, where the longer return turns a tight corner into a genuine working surface.
Many corner desks are described as left handed or right handed, meaning the longer side sits on one side of the corner. This is easy to get wrong, so picture yourself sitting at the desk and decide which way the longer run should fall. The correct handing keeps a doorway clear, sits closer to a socket or simply matches the way you naturally reach. Checking this before you buy avoids a frustrating return.
The shape also affects where storage can go. A symmetrical desk often pairs neatly with a slim drawer unit underneath, while an L shaped desk leaves room for a low cabinet at one end. Browse our office furniture range to find storage that suits the layout you choose, so your desk and its surroundings work together rather than competing for space.
A sale is a good moment to choose carefully rather than quickly. The temptation is to grab the first reduced desk you see, but the shape still has to suit your room. Measure both walls, decide on handing and confirm the depth you need before you commit. A reduced desk is only a good buy if it actually fits the way you live and work.
Choosing the right shape is the surest way to be happy with a corner desk for years. At Furniture in Fashion we offer a broad choice of corner layouts with free UK delivery, so you can match the shape to your room and your habits with confidence.
Shape is not only about the outline on the floor. The depth of each surface decides how far you can sit from a screen, and the height affects how comfortable you feel over a long day. A deeper wing lets you push a monitor back to a healthy distance, while a sensible height keeps your arms relaxed as you type. When you compare desk shapes, picture these dimensions in use rather than just the footprint. A desk that looks right on paper can still feel cramped if the depth is shallow or the height sits awkwardly for your chair.
Every room has features that point towards one shape over another. A window, a radiator, a doorway or a run of skirting can all influence where the longer surface should fall. Walk around the corner you have in mind and notice what sits nearby before you decide. Letting the room lead the choice usually results in a desk that feels like it was made for the space, rather than one squeezed in around obstacles.
A symmetrical desk has equal wings on each side, while an L shaped desk extends further on one side to give a longer working surface.
Picture yourself seated at the desk and decide which side the longer surface should fall on, taking doorways, sockets and your natural reach into account.
A symmetrical desk usually suits a tight square corner, while an L shape works well when one wall is longer and can take the extra run.
Yes. Decide on the shape and handing first, as these affect comfort and fit. Finish and colour can then be chosen to suit your room.
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