In some homes the television is simply there. In others it is the heart of the room, the thing the whole layout is built around. If your evenings revolve around films, sport and box sets, the unit beneath the screen deserves more thought than a quick afterthought purchase. When the television is the main feature, the right unit makes it look intentional rather than accidental.
When the screen is the focal point, the unit should support it without stealing attention. A wide, grounded base gives the television a sense of presence and stops it floating awkwardly on the wall. Choosing a TV unit that is broader than the screen creates a balanced frame, with a little surface either side for a lamp or a speaker.
Keep the styling around the screen calm. A pair of matching objects or a single low plant reads as deliberate, while a crowded surface pulls the eye away from the picture you are trying to enjoy.
A feature television usually brings devices with it, a streaming box, a console, perhaps a sound system. All of that needs a home. Closed cabinets keep the equipment out of sight while open compartments allow remotes to talk to devices without the doors open. Look across the full TV stands and cabinets range and count your devices before deciding how many shelves and drawers you need.
Cable management is the detail that separates a tidy feature wall from a messy one. Units with routing holes and a recess at the back let you gather leads neatly, so the screen sits clean against the wall.
A large screen in a small room can feel overwhelming if the unit is also bulky. In a generous room, a slim unit under a big screen can look lost. The unit and the screen should feel proportionate to each other and to the wall. A grounded wooden TV stand suits a warm, traditional room, while a reflective surface keeps a modern space feeling light beneath a large display.
If you use a sound bar, make sure the unit has room for it either in front of the screen or on a shelf below, without blocking the picture. The screen itself should sit so its centre is near eye level from your usual seat. This often means a lower unit than people expect, which is worth bearing in mind when the television is the centrepiece.
A feature screen still lives within a room, so the unit should relate to your seating and tables. Coordinating it with the rest of your living room furniture keeps the space cohesive, so the television feels like the star of a considered room rather than a gadget dropped into it. We supply a wide range of modern furniture across the UK at Furniture in Fashion with free delivery, which makes it simple to coordinate the unit with sofas and side tables.
Measure the wall and the screen. Count your devices. Decide how much you want on show. Pick a width wider than the television and a height that keeps the screen at eye level. Then choose a finish that fits the mood of the room. With those steps done, the television earns its place as the main feature without dominating the space awkwardly.
When the television is the centrepiece, the lighting around it deserves attention. A bright overhead light bouncing off the screen flattens the picture and tires the eyes. Softer, lower lighting placed to the sides of the seating gives a gentle backdrop that frames the screen rather than competing with it. A pair of table lamps at either end of the unit, or a slim floor lamp nearby, casts a warm glow that makes the whole feature feel intentional in the evening. Avoid placing a strong light directly behind the screen, since the contrast can be harsh.
A focal television wall is on show all the time, so it rewards a little upkeep. Wipe the surface regularly, keep the cables tidy behind the unit and resist the temptation to let post and odds and ends gather on the top. A clutter free surface keeps the eye on the screen and the styling you have chosen. Swapping the one or two objects beside the television now and then, a different vase or a seasonal plant, keeps the feature feeling considered rather than static, without any cost or effort beyond a moment of rearranging.
Yes. A unit a little wider than the screen looks balanced and gives you useful surface space on either side for lamps or speakers.
Choose a unit with cable routing holes and a recess at the back, then gather leads together so the screen sits clean against the wall.
A mix works best. Closed cabinets hide clutter, while a little open shelving lets remotes reach devices without opening doors.
A wide, grounded base in a proportionate finish. Match its weight to the room so a big screen looks intentional rather than top heavy.
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