The matched dining set served generations of British homes well, but a more relaxed approach has taken hold over the last decade. Mixing chair styles introduces personality, breaks up the formality of a dining room and makes a small change feel like a refresh rather than a renovation. Done well it looks considered. Done casually it can feel chaotic, so a little planning helps.
The aim is variety with a thread of continuity. The eye needs something to follow around the table, whether that is colour, material or silhouette.
The simplest way to mix chairs successfully is to choose one feature that stays consistent. That might be a shared timber tone, a similar seat height, or a single accent colour that appears on at least two chairs around the table. Without this thread the chairs read as a collection of leftovers rather than a curated mix.
Seat height matters more than people realise. Even when the chair silhouettes differ, sitting at the same level around the table feels comfortable and looks balanced when guests gather for a meal.
A popular method is to place two statement chairs at the head and foot of the table, with four simpler chairs along the sides. The statement chairs might be upholstered carvers in a deeper fabric, while the side chairs are slim wooden designs. This setup gives the room a clear structure and works particularly well in formal or semi formal dining rooms.
Our range of wooden dining chairs pairs neatly with upholstered carvers from the wider fabric dining chairs collection.
A long bench along one side of the table, with individual chairs on the opposite side, creates relaxed seating without sacrificing style. Benches feel modern, work well for families with children and free up floor space. They also encourage everyone to slide along and share, which suits casual meals. Browse our dining benches for options that pair with most dining tables.
The most reliable rule is to limit yourself to three materials around the table: usually wood, fabric and metal, or wood, leather and rattan. Any more and the eye loses its anchor.
If you introduce woven or rattan chairs, keep at least two of them around the table so the texture reads as intentional. A single rattan chair among five upholstered ones looks orphaned rather than considered.
Colour is where most mixed dining setups succeed or fail. Stick to a palette of three closely related tones, such as cream, oat and soft taupe, or olive, sage and warm clay. Then allow the silhouettes to differ. The shared tonal range makes the variation feel deliberate.
If you prefer a stronger contrast, keep the chairs themselves neutral and let the table or rug carry the colour. Painted wooden chairs in muted tones can also work, although too many bright shades can pull the room in different directions.
Balance is easier when the chairs share roughly similar proportions. A tall winged armchair beside a low stool looks awkward. Aim for backs that sit within around ten centimetres of each other in height. Chair widths also matter, especially when you need to fit six or eight diners around a fixed length table.
Inherited chairs sit beautifully alongside contemporary designs when the materials echo each other. A vintage carver in oak pairs well with new oak side chairs of a slimmer profile. A simple reupholstery in a neutral performance fabric can refresh a tired chair and bring it into line with the rest of the room.
Mixed dining chairs reward patience. Add one new chair at a time, live with the arrangement for a few weeks, then refine. Move chairs around to see which positions suit which silhouettes. Explore the wider dining chairs collection at Furniture in Fashion to find designs that complement what you already own.
Three is a comfortable maximum at one table. Beyond that the room can start to feel unsettled.
The seat heights should match so diners sit comfortably together. The backs can vary by ten centimetres or so without looking unbalanced.
Yes, a bench on one side and chairs on the other is a very effective combination, especially in family homes.
Generally yes. Matching the two end chairs gives the eye a resting point and frames the rest of the mix.
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