Awkward layouts rarely come from poor taste. They come from rooms that try to do too much, doorways in inconvenient places, radiators on the only good wall, or a fireplace and television that compete for attention. Once you accept the room as it is, fixing the layout becomes a matter of decisions rather than compromises.
Every comfortable layout begins with a focal point. In some homes that is a fireplace, in others a window, and in many a wall mounted television. If you have two competing focal points, choose one and let the other recede. A floor plan with no clear anchor will always feel scattered. Our TV units can help draw the screen into a single visual zone rather than letting it dominate.
The instinct to push every piece against a wall is one of the most common reasons living rooms feel awkward. Walls are not the only support a room offers. Pulling a sofa even 20 centimetres away from the wall, then balancing it with a chair and a side table, creates a conversation pocket. In smaller spaces, a two seater paired with a single armchair often works better than a three seater alone. Browse our 2 seater fabric sofas if you want a piece that softens a tight room.
A rug acts like a frame. It tells the eye where seating begins and ends, especially in open plan rooms where a living area shares space with dining or working zones. As a rule, the front legs of every main seat should rest on the rug. A rug that is too small floats in the middle of the floor and makes furniture look stranded.
Long, narrow rooms and rooms with awkward corners benefit from a corner sofa. By following the shape of the wall, a corner sofa removes the need for additional seating that often clutters a small space. Our corner sofas are made for exactly this kind of layout problem, where every metre of wall counts.
Walk the room before you move furniture. Where do you enter from the hallway? Where is the kitchen door? Where do you reach for the curtains? A good layout leaves at least 70 to 80 centimetres of clear path through the room. If a chair forces a small detour, it will feel awkward even if it looks correct on a mood board.
An awkward room is sometimes a room of the wrong heights. A sofa with a low back, a tall lamp on a side table and a high media unit make the eye jump. Try to keep two or three of your largest pieces within a similar visual range so the room reads as one composition. A balanced coffee table in front of seating helps anchor everything around the same level.
Sometimes the awkwardness comes from things stored on display. A coat draped over a chair or a stack of books on the floor are layout problems disguised as clutter. A sideboard, console table or low shelving unit can soak up the visible mess and re centre the room.
Once you have moved furniture, leave the room and walk back in. Does the eye land somewhere natural? Is there a clear seating circle? Does the room invite you to sit down, or to stand still? These quiet tests reveal more than any plan on paper. We have seen many UK living rooms transform with the same furniture simply rearranged after this check, and at Furniture in Fashion we often recommend trying the rearrangement before adding anything new.
Not always. If the room has a fireplace or a strong window view, those can lead, with the television placed to the side or above the focal point.
Around 40 to 45 centimetres is a comfortable distance. Close enough to reach, far enough to allow legs to stretch.
Yes, in larger rooms. A second seating pocket near a window or in a quiet corner gives the room more than one purpose without making it feel divided.
Leave a small gap behind the sofa, around 10 to 15 centimetres, and choose a piece without a solid back panel. The heat will still circulate and the wall remains usable.
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