Bedside storage often gets decided in a hurry, yet it sets the tone for how a bedroom feels day to day. Drawers and open shelves both have their merits, and the right choice depends on the way you actually use the space rather than how it looks in a styled photograph. Thinking through habits first, and aesthetics second, leads to a more comfortable result. The full bedside cabinets collection at Furniture in Fashion covers both options in a wide range of finishes.
Drawers keep clutter out of sight, which is their strongest argument. Charging cables, hand cream, reading glasses, lip balm, a notebook, all of these tend to accumulate beside a bed. Behind a drawer front they disappear, leaving only the lamp and perhaps one styled object on top. For bedrooms that double as a space for reading or working, drawers also protect contents from dust. In rooms where calm is the priority, hidden storage tends to win.
Open shelves invite a more relaxed, layered look. A small stack of books, a candle, a folded muslin cloth, a ceramic dish, these become part of the styling rather than items to be tidied away. For people who enjoy rotating objects with the seasons or who like their current read to be visible, open shelves give that flexibility. They also tend to be lighter visually, which suits smaller rooms where a solid drawer unit might feel heavy.
Before choosing, consider what genuinely lives on your bedside cabinet at the moment. If the top surface is usually clear, open shelves below will feel uncluttered. If the surface is regularly covered in small items, drawers will help the room feel calmer. A quick honest audit is more useful than imagining an ideal version of yourself. Some homes also benefit from a mixed unit, with one drawer on top and an open shelf below, which the wooden bedside cabinets range offers in several designs.
Drawers and open shelves react differently to materials. A high gloss drawer front catches light and keeps a contemporary mood, which suits clean lined modern bedrooms. The high gloss bedside cabinets selection shows how finish can lift a room. Open shelves, on the other hand, look most natural in warm wood or painted finishes, where the contents become part of the visual story. Matching the finish to the rest of the bedroom helps either choice settle in.
In a smaller or darker bedroom, open shelves can keep the eye moving and prevent the room from feeling boxed in. In a larger bedroom with good natural light, a solid drawer unit anchors the space and provides useful contrast. Lighting also plays a role, since shelves benefit from a nearby lamp to highlight the layered objects, while drawers can work with softer, more ambient light.
The honest test of any bedside choice is how it feels after a month of use. Drawers reward those who keep things tidy by hiding everyday tools quickly. Open shelves reward those who enjoy a curated display and do not mind a quick weekly tidy. Neither is better in the abstract, only better suited to a particular way of living. If you are torn, a piece that combines the two, sometimes paired with nearby bookcases or a small shelving unit, can offer the practicality of one and the openness of the other.
Drawers suit hidden storage, a calmer surface, and bedrooms that lean toward minimalism. Open shelves suit visual layering, frequent rotation of objects, and bedrooms that feel softer and more lived in. Both work in small or large rooms, but the choice should reflect how you actually live, not how the room might look on a single styled day.
Yes, in most cases. Items inside drawers stay protected from settled dust, which can be helpful for skincare bottles, jewellery, and reading material kept long term.
They can, if everyday items are left on them without thought. A small tray on an open shelf can corral loose objects and keep the look intentional.
Drawers tend to keep the bedside zone tidy in shared or rented spaces, which can be easier when moving between rooms or homes frequently.
Yes. Many bedside cabinets pair a single drawer at the top with an open shelf below, which suits a wide range of UK bedrooms.
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