Most bedroom chairs in UK homes lead a double life. For most of the week they hold a folded jumper, a stack of books or the cardigan that did not quite make it back to the wardrobe. Then someone stays the weekend and the same chair becomes proper seating, the place where a guest sits to lace up shoes, read for an hour or have a quiet morning coffee away from the kitchen. Choosing the right chair is really about handling both jobs without the room feeling cramped.
At Furniture in Fashion we have seen that the chairs which work hardest tend to share a few traits. They sit comfortably, they hold up to weight, and they look intentional rather than improvised.
Before looking at fabric or shape, walk the room. Note the door swing, the wardrobe doors and the path from the bed to the en suite if there is one. A bedroom chair only works as extra seating if a guest can actually sit in it without bumping a knee on a chest of drawers.
For most UK double bedrooms, the corner opposite the wardrobe or the wall beside the window is where a chair sits best. If the room is tight, a slimmer accent style may suit better than a deep upholstered armchair.
A common mistake is buying a chair that looks the right size on a website but turns out to be a small accent piece more suited to a hallway. For guest use, look for a seat width of around 50 cm or more, a seat depth of 45 cm or more and a back height that supports the shoulders. Anything smaller becomes a perch rather than a chair.
You can browse a range of bedroom chairs filtered by size, which makes it easier to find a piece scaled for adult guests.
Bedroom chairs see two kinds of life, the daily clothes throw and the occasional guest. The fabric needs to handle both. Tightly woven textured fabrics in calm tones, soft greys, warm taupes, deep olive, hide everyday creases from clothes far better than smooth solid colours. Velvet looks lovely in photographs but shows pressure marks if a folded jumper sits on it overnight.
If you have pets in the house, a fabric labelled stain resistant or a removable washable cover earns its keep. Avoid very pale fabrics in a busy family bedroom unless you are willing to keep the chair clear.
For dual use, the chair should look like a chair when not in use, not a heap of clothes. Shapes with a defined frame, a clear back and visible legs help here, because even when something is draped over them they still read as furniture. Tub shapes and accent armchairs work well. Fully upholstered cube shapes tend to disappear under the morning’s outfit.
If you would like a slightly more relaxed feel, a tub chair in a soft fabric strikes a good balance between comfort and tidy lines.
A guest sitting in a bedroom chair for half an hour notices comfort fast. A small lumbar cushion and a folded throw transform a firm chair into something genuinely usable, and they tidy away easily when the chair returns to clothes duty. Keep cushions small, two at most, so the chair does not become a clutter magnet.
If you have the space, place a small side table next to the chair so a guest can rest a cup or a book. A tiny side table gives the corner a finished feel and quietly suggests this is a place to sit, not a wardrobe.
A chair without nearby light rarely gets used. Position the chair within reach of a floor lamp or a wall light, ideally one that can be switched on without crossing the room. Soft, warm light at shoulder height makes the chair feel like a real reading spot, which is exactly what a guest wants on the second evening of their stay.
It is tempting to bring in a chair that matches the sitting room sofa, but bedrooms benefit from a softer, less formal palette. Pick a chair tone that sits with your bedding and curtains rather than your living room cushions. A calmer pairing keeps the bedroom restful and stops the chair from looking like a stranded living room piece. If you do want a coordinated look across the home, consider browsing our wider living room furniture range first to understand the tones you already own.
Look for a seat width of around 50 cm or more and a seat depth of 45 cm or more so adult guests can sit comfortably without feeling perched.
The corner opposite the wardrobe or the wall beside the window usually works best. Avoid blocking door swings or the path to the bed.
It often does, but choosing a chair with a clear frame and visible legs means it still reads as furniture even with a jumper draped over it.
Velvet looks lovely but shows pressure marks easily, so a tightly woven textured fabric tends to be more practical for everyday use.
It is not essential, but a small side table makes the chair feel like real seating and gives a guest somewhere to put a drink or a book.
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