Neutral interiors have served British homes well for over a decade. They are calming, easy to live with, and forgiving when furniture changes. Yet many of us reach a point where the rooms begin to feel a little flat, and richer colour starts to call. Moving from a quiet neutral palette to something with more depth does not require ripping everything out. It needs a thoughtful, staged approach.
Before reaching for paint charts, think about how the room should feel after the change. Cosier? More dramatic? More energetic? Rich greens lean restful and natural. Deep blues feel composed and considered. Warm reds and ochres bring a hospitable quality. Plums and burgundies suggest sophistication. Choosing a feeling first prevents you from picking a colour purely because it is fashionable.
The simplest first step is introducing rich colour through textiles. Throws, cushions, lampshades and rugs let you test a deeper tone in the room before any paint touches the wall. A neutral sofa works as a quiet stage for this, and for that reason many homeowners keep their existing piece while adding new layers. Browse our rugs in deeper hues such as moss, terracotta or ink to anchor a more colourful direction.
Once your textiles feel established, the next stage is a single larger piece in a richer tone. This might be an armchair in olive velvet, a sideboard in deep walnut, or a console in bottle green. The key is that it should feel intentional rather than apologetic. A bold console in a hallway, for example, sets the tone for the rest of the home before guests even reach the lounge. Our console tables include options in moodier finishes that suit this stage of the transition.
When the soft layers and statement piece feel right, paint becomes the natural next step. Rather than committing to all four walls immediately, start with the wall behind the sofa or bed. This single change can transform a room without overwhelming it. Once you live with it for a few weeks, you will know whether to extend the colour or pull it back.
British light is notoriously variable, and rich colours behave very differently across the day. Deep teal can read black at night and almost coastal in the morning. Burgundy can shift from warm cherry to dusty plum. Always paint a sample directly onto the wall, never just on a card, and observe it in morning, midday and evening light before deciding.
A common mistake during this transition is removing every neutral element. Rich schemes need breathing space. Keep at least one large neutral piece, such as a pale rug, a cream sofa, or untreated oak flooring, so the eye has somewhere to rest. Our fabric sofas in soft beiges, oat and stone make excellent neutral anchors that allow richer colour to take centre stage around them.
Designers often follow a simple rule of three. Whatever rich colour you introduce, repeat it in three places around the room. For example, a bottle green wall, a bottle green vase on the sideboard, and bottle green piping on a cushion. This creates cohesion rather than the sense that one item is shouting on its own.
Rich rooms absorb light, so layered lighting becomes essential. Floor lamps, table lamps and warm bulbs help richer colours glow rather than darken. Browse our floor lamps for pieces that suit deeper schemes and bring evening rooms to life.
Yes. A neutral sofa often becomes more useful in a rich scheme, providing balance and preventing the room from feeling overworked.
Most people benefit from giving each stage a few weeks. Rushing tends to lead to choices that do not feel cohesive.
Yes, when balanced with sufficient lighting and a few lighter accents. Small rooms can feel intimate and refined in deeper shades.
Painting woodwork in the same shade as the wall, or just one tone away, is one of the most effective ways to make a rich colour feel grown up rather than patchy.
For more pieces that suit a transitional or fully rich scheme, the team at Furniture in Fashion is here to help you find furniture that grows with your home, with free UK delivery on every order.
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