Furniture in Fashion Blog
Furniture in Fashion Blog
Furniture in Fashion Blog
The kitchen diner has become the heart of many UK homes, a place where cooking, eating and relaxing all happen in one connected space. Adding a family television to that mix asks a little more of your furniture, as the unit has to cope with steam, spills and a busy stream of people while still looking at home alongside the dining table. Choosing well makes the whole room work harder without feeling cluttered.
Think About Where Everyone Sits
In a kitchen diner the screen is rarely watched from one fixed sofa. People glance at it while cooking, eating or helping with homework, so the unit should sit where the picture is visible from the main gathering points. A position that can be seen from both the dining table and the cooking area usually earns its place. Once you know roughly where the screen needs to face, the full TV units range gives you widths and heights to suit the spot.
Choose Surfaces That Cope With Family Life
This is a room where surfaces take a beating. Hard wearing finishes that wipe clean easily are worth prioritising over delicate materials. A robust timber or laminate top shrugs off the odd splash and the daily wipe down better than a surface that marks readily. Our wooden TV stands offer that sturdy, practical feel, while a high gloss finish from our high gloss TV stands reflects light and cleans with a quick wipe, which suits a brighter, more contemporary kitchen.
Storage That Reduces Clutter
Kitchen diners gather everyday items quickly, from chargers to children’s bits and pieces. A unit with closed cupboards and a couple of drawers keeps the surface clear and hides the clutter that otherwise creeps across a worktop. Look for a balance of open shelving for devices that need ventilation and closed storage for everything you would rather not see. An entertainment style unit with generous storage can double as a sideboard for the dining end of the room, and our entertainment units are built with that kind of versatility in mind.
Keep It Away From Heat and Steam
Position matters for the life of the furniture as well as the picture. Try to keep the unit and screen away from the hob and kettle, where steam and grease can settle on surfaces and devices. A spot towards the dining or relaxing end of the room is kinder to both the electronics and the finish. If wall space is tight, a low unit beneath a window or along a side wall often works without crowding the cooking zone.
Scale It to the Room
Kitchen diners vary hugely, from compact galley extensions to broad open plan additions. In a smaller space, a slim low unit keeps the room feeling open and leaves room to move around the table. In a larger room you can afford a longer unit that balances the dining furniture and gives more storage. The key is making sure the unit does not block the natural flow between cooking, eating and sitting.
Tying the Two Zones Together
Because a kitchen diner blends two functions, it helps when the television unit speaks to both. Matching its finish to your dining furniture or other storage creates a sense of one room rather than two areas bolted together. At Furniture in Fashion we offer free UK delivery across our ranges, so coordinating the dining and relaxing ends of the room can be done in a single order.
Frequently Asked Questions
What finish is best for a kitchen diner TV unit? Choose hard wearing, wipe clean surfaces such as sturdy timber, laminate or high gloss. They cope far better with splashes and daily cleaning than delicate finishes.
Where should the screen face in an open plan kitchen diner? Towards the main gathering points, so it can be seen from both the dining table and the cooking area. Avoid placing it where only one seat has a clear view.
How do I stop clutter building up? Pick a unit with closed cupboards and drawers alongside a little open shelving. Closed storage hides everyday items while open shelves keep devices ventilated.
Can a TV unit double as a sideboard? Yes. A larger entertainment unit with plenty of storage can serve both as a television stand and as extra storage for the dining end of the room.

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