The classic UK bedroom formula of bed, wardrobe, dressing table and pair of bedside tables is comfortable but predictable. Replacing some of those familiar pieces with cabinets opens up a calmer, more flexible room. Cabinets hide visual clutter behind doors, sit lower than wardrobes and adapt easily to awkward layouts in older homes. This guide explains how to plan a bedroom around cabinets without losing any of the practicality of the traditional approach.
The bed remains the centre of every bedroom, so place it first. Once it is positioned, look at what each adjacent wall could do. Where a wardrobe might dominate, a low cabinet keeps the wall visible and the ceiling line uninterrupted. Where a dressing table might sit, a slim sideboard with a mirror above can do the same job while doubling as bedroom storage. The aim is to lower the visual weight of the room.
Not every bedroom needs a full wardrobe. A tall narrow cabinet with a hanging rail handles a season’s worth of clothing, while a wide chest of drawers swallows the rest. This combination suits modern flats where ceiling heights are lower and a full wardrobe would overwhelm the space. For inspiration on alternatives, the broader wardrobes range sits alongside cabinets in our wider bedroom furniture selection so you can compare proportions before deciding.
Open bedside tables collect clutter quickly. A pair of closed front cabinets does the same job and keeps cables, chargers and bedtime reading out of sight. Mirrored fronts work especially well in rooms with limited daylight, since they bounce light back across the bed. The mirrored bedside cabinets range offers slim profiles that suit smaller rooms without crowding the bed.
If you watch television in the bedroom, a low cabinet is a more elegant solution than a stand alone TV unit. Choose one with cable management gaps at the back and shelves wide enough for a soundbar. Sideboards that sit at around 50 to 60 centimetres tall keep the TV at a comfortable height when viewed from the bed. They also blend with the rest of the room rather than announcing themselves.
Two slim cabinets placed either side of a wall mirror create a small dressing area without the formality of a dedicated dressing table. The tops hold a tray for jewellery, a candle and a vase of flowers, while the drawers store everyday cosmetics and accessories. A bench or upholstered stool at floor level finishes the arrangement. This layout suits longer rectangular rooms where one wall is otherwise underused.
When cabinets do most of the work in a room, the finishes need to sing together. Pick one dominant tone, for example warm oak, and bring in one quieter contrast such as soft black metal handles or stone coloured walls. Avoid mixing more than two woods in a single bedroom, since the room can begin to feel busy. The wooden bedside cabinets and matching chests in our ranges are designed to coordinate across pieces, which simplifies the choice.
Cabinet led bedrooms can feel a little architectural without softness. Layered linen bedding, a textured rug, sheer curtains and a low pendant light bring the room back to a relaxed mood. The hard lines of the cabinets balance against these softer textures, which is a key part of why this approach works so well in calm UK homes.
If you would like to see how cabinet led bedrooms are styled across different ranges, browse the wider collection at Furniture in Fashion, with free UK delivery on every order.
Yes, especially in flats and second bedrooms. A slim hanging cabinet combined with a generous chest of drawers covers most clothing storage needs.
The opposite is usually true. Closed doors hide everyday items, so the room reads as calm even when the cabinet itself is full.
Bedside cabinets should sit roughly level with the top of the mattress. Storage cabinets read best at chest height or lower, since taller pieces can dominate the room.
They show some marks, but a soft cloth and a mild glass cleaner once a week keeps them looking sharp. The light they reflect more than makes up for the small extra care.
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