Before you place a single object, think about what the shelving needs to do. A living room shelf might hold a mix of books, photographs and a few favourite pieces, while a home office shelf often needs to balance storage with display. Being clear about this from the start stops the shelves from becoming a dumping ground and gives every item a reason to be there.
If you are still choosing your storage, our bookcases come in a range of widths and heights to suit both alcoves and open walls, which makes it easier to plan the styling around the space you actually have.
Flat, evenly spaced rows of books can look tidy, but they rarely feel inviting. The most pleasing shelves use a mix of heights and orientations. Stand some books upright, lay a few flat to create a small platform, and place an object on top. This layering adds depth and stops the eye from skating across in a straight line.
Think in small groups rather than single items. A stack of books beside a vase and a low bowl will feel more considered than three unrelated objects spaced apart. Odd numbers tend to look more natural than even ones.
Shelves come alive when they mix the practical with the personal. Combine books with ceramics, framed prints, a small sculpture or a trailing plant. Negative space is part of the styling too, so do not feel you must fill every gap. A few well chosen pieces with room around them will always look calmer than a crowded display.
For pieces you want to protect or show off behind glass, a display cabinet offers a tidy way to present treasured items without them gathering dust on open shelving.
Not everything deserves to be on show. Baskets, boxes and closed units are your friends when it comes to cables, paperwork and bits that have no natural home. Mixing open shelving with a run of concealed storage gives you the best of both, letting you display what you love and tuck away what you do not. Our shelving units and storage options include open and closed designs that work well together.
A home office shelf has to earn its keep. Keep the items you reach for daily within easy view, and place reference books and files a little higher or lower. Group office supplies in matching containers so the working clutter looks intentional rather than chaotic. Leaving one shelf lighter, with just a plant or a single framed piece, gives your eye somewhere to rest during a long day at the desk.
If you are setting up a workspace from scratch, it helps to plan shelving alongside the rest of your office furniture so the storage and the desk feel like part of the same scheme rather than an afterthought.
A simple way to make shelves look pulled together is to limit your palette. Choose two or three tones that echo the rest of the room and let them repeat across the display. Texture adds interest without clutter, so mix smooth ceramics with rough stoneware, soft fabric spines with hard metal or glass. The contrast keeps the styling lively while the restrained colour keeps it calm.
When you think you are finished, walk away and return with fresh eyes. Almost every shelf benefits from removing one or two items. The goal is a display that feels relaxed and personal, not packed. Rotating pieces with the seasons keeps things feeling fresh without any new spending. For more inspiration across the home, browse the full range at Furniture in Fashion, with free UK delivery on your order.
Leave deliberate gaps and group items in small clusters rather than spreading them evenly. Removing one or two pieces almost always improves the look.
A mix of books, a few personal objects, some greenery and the occasional framed piece works well. Vary the heights to add depth.
Combine open shelves for everyday items with closed boxes or baskets for paperwork and cables, so the practical clutter stays hidden.
Echoing two or three colours from the wider room helps shelves feel part of the scheme. You do not need an exact match, just a sense of connection.
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