Trends in British interiors shift more often than most of us would like to admit. A scheme that felt fresh five years ago can read as dated today, and that often shows up first in the hallway, where the first impression of the home is shaped. Choosing hallway furniture that works with almost any style is one of the smartest decisions you can make, because it saves you from replacing pieces every few years when the rest of the home changes around it.
Rather than chasing the season, the trick is to look for quiet, well made pieces that pair with traditional, modern, coastal and Scandinavian schemes alike. Below is how to approach the choice with the long term in mind.
Before thinking about look, list what your hallway needs to do. Most British entries need to handle coats, shoes, keys, post and bags. Some also serve as a place to drop school items, dog leads or sports kit. Once the list is clear, you can shape the pieces around it. A console for keys and a lamp, a coat stand for outerwear and a slim cabinet for shoes will cover almost every household.
Browsing the full hallway furniture range with this list to hand keeps you focused and stops you from buying decorative pieces that do not pull their weight.
Some materials and colours adapt to almost any scheme. Light oak, walnut, warm grey, soft white and matt black are all quiet finishes that sit happily alongside both modern and traditional decor. Avoid heavily distressed or strongly themed finishes, as these tend to lock a piece into one look.
If you like a bolder finish, keep it on a single piece rather than the whole entry. One statement console in a deep colour, paired with neutral storage around it, will age more gracefully than a fully themed hallway.
The shape of a piece can date faster than its colour. Curved, bulky designs tend to feel of their moment, while clean rectangular and gently rounded forms have stayed in style across many decades. A console table with straight legs and a simple top will work in almost any setting, while an ornate carved version is much harder to restyle later.
Scale matters as much as shape. A piece that is too large will dominate a narrow corridor, and one that is too small will look lost. Measure the wall and floor space before browsing, and allow a clear walkway of around 80 centimetres for comfortable passage.
Once your core pieces are in place, treat the walls, lighting and accessories as the parts you can change over time. Cushions, art, vases and runners are far cheaper to refresh than furniture, and they let your hallway evolve as your taste shifts.
A wall mirror is one of the few accessories that suits every scheme. Choose a shape with simple lines, such as round, oval or rectangular, and the same mirror can move with you from a country home to a city flat without looking out of place. Our wall mirrors include shapes that suit many interiors.
If you rent or expect to move within the next few years, look for furniture that can change rooms when you do. A slim console can later serve as a side table or behind a sofa. A coat stand becomes a useful piece in a bedroom corner. Slim shoe cabinets often fit beneath stairs or inside wardrobes in a future home.
A freestanding coat stand is especially flexible because it never needs drilling or wall fixings, which makes it a quiet favourite with renters and those who prefer not to commit to a permanent layout.
One of the easiest ways to give a hallway lasting style is to combine one older piece with newer, quieter items around it. A vintage rug under a modern console looks considered without feeling staged. A modern mirror above an inherited hall chest brings the chest into the present. Try to keep only one of these statement pieces in the hallway. More than that can read as cluttered.
The entry should not look like a separate room. Use one or two tones from the nearby rooms in your hallway pieces so the spaces flow into each other. If your living room features warm oak, a hallway console in the same wood will tie the two areas together. For wider inspiration, the full collections at Furniture in Fashion are organised by material and finish, which makes coordinating across rooms much easier.
Light oak, walnut, warm grey, soft white and matt black are all quiet, flexible choices that pair well with both modern and traditional schemes.
Stick to slim profiles, hang a mirror to bounce light and keep the colour palette pale. Wall mounted pieces also help by leaving the floor clear.
Not at all. Pieces that share a tone or finish will read as a set without being identical. A loose mix is often more interesting than a fully matched group.
A slim console table covers most needs. It holds keys and a lamp, can sit beneath a mirror and works in nearly every style of home.
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