Square footage is fixed, but the feeling of space is entirely flexible. A 12 square metre dining room can feel claustrophobic or surprisingly airy depending on the choices you make in it. At Furniture in Fashion, we have helped customers in flats, terraced houses and modern new builds make small dining rooms feel almost double their size. The techniques are not tricks. They are basic principles of sightline, light and visual weight, applied consistently across the room.
Solid dark wood absorbs light and visually anchors the room downwards. Glass and pale finishes do the opposite. Our glass dining tables are particularly effective because the eye travels straight through the surface, which removes a large piece of visual mass from the centre of the room. Pale oak and high gloss white have a similar lifting effect even when the table is solid, because they reflect rather than absorb daylight.
The more visible floor a room has, the larger it reads. Pick chairs with slim metal legs rather than chunky upholstered bases. Choose sideboards on legs rather than ones that sit flush with the floor. The visible strip of floor running underneath every piece creates a sense of air and openness that closed in furniture quietly destroys.
In small rooms, sharp corners eat space and create awkward walking paths. A round table seats more people in less square footage and lets everyone slide past easily. An oval table is the same idea stretched out for narrow rooms. Both shapes are well represented across our dining tables collection, including extending versions for households whose numbers change.
A large mirror on the wall opposite the window literally doubles the daylight in the room. A mirrored sideboard performs the same trick at floor level and reflects the rug and lower furniture, making the space appear deeper. Even a tall, slim mirror leaning against a wall can transform a tight room. Our decorative mirrors range covers a wide variety of frames so the mirror can either stand out as a feature or quietly recede into the wall.
Multiple strong colours chop a small room into pieces. A tonal palette of one base colour plus two or three close shades lets the eye flow uninterrupted from wall to floor to furniture, which the brain reads as more space. Add interest through texture rather than colour, with a chunky knit throw, a textured rug or a velvet chair seat.
A bench tucks completely under the table when not in use, so there are no chair backs sticking out into the room. Our dining benches work brilliantly for this and also let you fit more people around the table when needed. The cleaner low line replaces three or four bulky chair shapes with a single horizontal one, which the eye finds far more restful.
Mounting the curtain rod close to the ceiling and extending it well beyond the window frame on both sides makes the window appear larger and the ceiling higher. Floor length curtains in a colour close to the wall continue the effect. The room feels taller and lighter as a quiet by product.
One large statement piece of art works far better than a busy gallery wall in a small space. Empty wall space is not wasted space. It is breathing room that lets the eye rest and the room expand. Pair this with bright, even lighting that reaches the corners and the room stops feeling boxy.
A single overhead light leaves corners dark, which makes the room feel smaller. Add a wall light, a sideboard lamp or a small floor lamp in the darkest corner. Lighting the edges of the room makes the space feel as wide as the lit area, not just the centre. A dimmer keeps the same room flexible from morning through to evening.
You do not need to do everything at once. Swap the chairs for slimmer ones, or replace a heavy table with a glass one, and the difference is immediate. Small dining rooms do not have to feel small. They just need the right choices in the right order.
Yes, because the surface does not block the eye. You see the rug, the floor and the legs of the chairs straight through the table, which the brain reads as more open space.
Not always. Dark walls with consistent tones can actually make a small room feel intimate and intentional. The mistake is using dark walls combined with chunky dark furniture, which together close the room down.
Larger than feels comfortable. A mirror that fills most of one wall, especially opposite the window, has a much stronger spatial effect than a small mirror used as a decorative accent.
Round if the room is square, oval if the room is narrow. Both shapes use the floor more efficiently than a sharp cornered rectangle in a tight space.
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