Furniture in Fashion Blog
Furniture in Fashion Blog
Furniture in Fashion Blog
The Difference Between Rich and Restless
Maximalism has returned to British homes with confidence. After years of pared back neutrals, many people want colour, pattern and personality again. Yet there is a fine line between a room that feels rich and curated and one that feels restless and cluttered. The secret is that good maximalism is deeply considered. It only looks effortless.
At Furniture in Fashion we love a bold interior, but we believe abundance still needs structure. The ideas below show how to layer colour, texture and objects so the result feels intentional rather than overwhelming. As you plan, our living room furniture range offers plenty of statement pieces to build around.
Anchor the Room First
Every maximalist room needs a few solid anchors before the layering begins. A generous sofa, a substantial rug and a strong piece of storage give the eye somewhere to settle amid the richness. A velvet sofa in a deep tone makes a wonderful anchor, grounding the colour and texture around it. Browse our fabric sofas for shapes with enough presence to hold a busy scheme together.
Without these anchors, layers of pattern and colour have nothing to lean on, and the room tips into chaos. With them, you can be far braver elsewhere.
Choose a Disciplined Palette
It may seem strange to talk of discipline in maximalism, but a defined palette is what separates curated from chaotic. Pick a family of three or four colours and let everything relate to it. Deep greens with warm rust and brass, or inky blues with ochre and cream, give you room to play while keeping the scheme coherent.
Repeat each colour at least twice across the room so the eye travels naturally. A single rogue shade with no echo elsewhere is what makes a bold room feel accidental.
Layer Pattern With a Plan
Mixing pattern is the heart of maximalism, but it works best when the patterns vary in scale. Pair a large floral with a small geometric and a simple stripe so they complement rather than compete. Cushions, rugs and curtains are the easiest places to experiment. A patterned rug can set the tone for the entire room and tie disparate elements together.
Keep at least one calm surface in the mix, such as a plain wall or an uncluttered table, so the eye has somewhere to rest between the busier areas.
Curate Your Displays
Maximalism celebrates collections, but a collection still needs editing. Group objects by theme, colour or material and display them with a little breathing room. A glass cabinet keeps treasured pieces visible while containing them, which stops shelves from spilling into clutter. Our display cabinets are ideal for showing off ceramics, glassware or books in a way that feels deliberate.
Think of each display as a small still life. Vary the heights, leave gaps, and remove anything that does not add to the story.
Balance Bold With Quiet
The most successful maximalist rooms contain moments of quiet. A bare patch of wall, a simple lamp or an empty corner gives the richness room to breathe. These pauses are what stop abundance from becoming overwhelming. Resist the urge to fill every surface, and trust that restraint in places makes the bold elements shine.
Trust Lighting to Pull It Together
Layered lighting suits layered interiors. A mix of table lamps, floor lamps and a statement pendant creates pools of warmth that flatter colour and texture. In the evening, soft light unifies a busy scheme far better than a single bright overhead bulb ever could.
Add Personality Through Materials
Maximalism is as much about touch as it is about colour. Brass, timber, velvet, glass and stone each bring their own character, and combining them gives a room real depth. A brass framed mirror beside a velvet chair and a stone topped table tells a richer story than any single material could on its own. The variety is part of the charm, provided the tones still relate to your chosen palette.
Materials also let you express personality without adding more objects, which is useful in a smaller British home where space is tight. A textured rug, a glossy cabinet or a sculptural lamp can carry a great deal of interest in a modest footprint. Lean on these tactile choices when you want the room to feel layered and confident but cannot give over more floor space to extra furniture.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I stop maximalism looking messy? Anchor the room with a few solid pieces, define a tight palette, and leave deliberate moments of quiet so the richness has room to breathe.
How many colours should a maximalist room use? A family of three or four colours, each repeated at least twice across the room, keeps a bold scheme coherent rather than accidental.
What is the best way to mix patterns? Vary the scale. Combine a large pattern with a medium and a small one so they complement each other instead of competing.
Can maximalism work in a small UK home? Yes. Keep the palette disciplined, choose fewer but stronger pieces, and use a display cabinet to contain collections so the space feels curated rather than crowded.

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