No two UK living rooms are identical. A Georgian townhouse reception is nothing like a 1930s semi lounge, and neither resembles a modern new build open plan space. Matching a sofa to the layout rather than to a trend produces a room that actually works, not just one that looks good in a photograph.
Most UK lounges fall into a handful of categories. Square rooms around four by four metres suit a U shape seating arrangement with one main sofa and two chairs. Long narrow rooms of three by six metres benefit from a straight sofa along the longer wall. L shaped rooms, common in extensions, pair well with a corner sofa that mirrors the room shape. Open plan spaces use the sofa to divide zones.
Sketch the room on graph paper, mark the doorways and radiators, and walk through a few arrangements before shopping. Our sofa furniture pages list total dimensions so you can scale the drawing accurately.
Every living room has a focal point. In a period home this is often the fireplace. In a modern home it may be a television wall or a large window. Orient the sofa toward the focal point rather than against it. If the fireplace and television compete for attention, a corner sofa lets both be seen from different seats.
Two smaller sofas facing each other create a formal conversation layout that suits square Georgian and Victorian rooms. A single larger sofa with a pair of lounge chaise chairs at an angle feels more relaxed and suits modern family rooms. The choice depends on how the household uses the space. Formal entertaining favours two sofas, while daily relaxed living favours one sofa and chairs.
Many UK homes have bay windows, which offer both an opportunity and a challenge. Avoid placing a sofa back against the bay, since it blocks the light and feels awkward. A window seat with cushions inside the bay, paired with a sofa across the room, uses the bay without losing its character.
Kitchen and lounge extensions often produce an L shape footprint. A corner sofa that follows the L line uses the shape rather than fighting it. Place the chaise arm toward the kitchen end and the main sofa run toward the garden view. Our corner sofas include left hand and right hand versions, so measure which orientation suits your room.
People need to move through a living room without stepping over feet or squeezing past furniture. Leave at least seventy centimetres between the sofa and the nearest piece, whether that is a coffee table, a chair, or a wall. A sofa with a shallow back works well in homes where the walk to the kitchen passes behind the seating.
High ceiling rooms, such as Victorian reception rooms, can handle taller back sofas that would feel looming in a low ceiling new build. Conversely, a high back sofa in a cottage with 2.2 metre ceilings can feel oppressive. Match the sofa back height to the room proportions. Around eighty to ninety centimetres suits most rooms, while a hundred centimetres suits taller spaces.
A period home with dark wood floors and original cornicing suits warm tones such as tan leather, deep green, or soft mustard. A modern new build with pale laminate flooring and crisp white walls suits cooler tones such as pale grey, stone, or soft blue. Our fabric sofas come in a wide range of tones suited to every architectural style.
Once the sofa is placed, add a footstool or a side table to complete the arrangement. A foot stool offers flexibility as extra seating or a legs up spot during evenings. Side tables give the sofa a sense of being properly hosted within the room rather than just placed.
A U shape arrangement with one sofa and two chairs uses a square room well.
Not necessarily. Compact corner models with wooden legs suit period rooms without looking out of place.
Around forty to fifty centimetres lets people stretch their legs without knocking the table.
Yes. High ceiling rooms suit taller backs, while low ceiling rooms feel better with lower backed sofas.
Yes, clean lined sofas often flatter period features by letting the architecture stand out.
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