Furniture in Fashion Blog
Furniture in Fashion Blog
Furniture in Fashion Blog
Edwardian homes carry a quiet confidence that many later builds lack. Generous proportions, tall windows, deep skirting and original cornicing give the dining room a head start that is worth respecting. The aim when decorating is not to freeze the room in its period, but to let those original features set the tone while modern furniture keeps daily life comfortable. Get the balance right and an Edwardian dining room feels both grounded and gently current.
Read the room before you change it
Start by noticing what the house already gives you. Picture rails, a bay window, a fireplace or wide architraves are all features to work with rather than hide. Edwardian rooms often have softer, lighter proportions than their Victorian predecessors, so they suit schemes that feel airy as well as those with deeper colour. Decide early whether you want to play up the period character or strike a contrast with cleaner modern pieces, because that choice guides everything that follows.
Anchor the room with a generous table
The proportions of an Edwardian dining room can carry a substantial table, and a well chosen timber piece sits naturally against original features. Solid oak or walnut echoes the warmth of period joinery and ages gracefully alongside it. Our wooden dining tables range offers grain and weight that feel at home beneath high ceilings. Centre the table under the main light and leave enough clearance around it to move chairs freely, which these rooms usually allow with ease.
Mix period feel with comfortable seating
Seating is where you can soften the formality. Upholstered chairs in a muted linen or velvet bring comfort and a touch of softness against the architecture, while slimmer wooden frames keep things light if the room is busy. There is no need to match every chair to the table. A considered mix can feel collected rather than showroom perfect. Browse our dining chairs to find frames and fabrics that suit the mood you are after, whether that leans traditional or quietly contemporary.
Use a sideboard for storage and display
Edwardian dining rooms were designed for entertaining, and a sideboard remains the most useful piece for the way we still host. It hides everyday clutter, offers a surface for serving and gives you a place to display a lamp, a mirror or a few favourite objects. A sideboard with timber tones that relate to the table ties the scheme together. Our sideboards include designs that suit the scale of a period room without overwhelming it.
Layer in mirrors and art
Tall walls in Edwardian homes invite art hung a little higher than you might expect, often in step with the picture rail. A large mirror above a fireplace or sideboard reflects light from the bay window and adds a sense of depth that flatters the proportions. Our decorative mirrors can act as a single statement piece, while a considered arrangement of wall art brings personality to large blank walls without cluttering them. Keep frames in a consistent finish so the wall feels composed rather than random.
Choose colours that flatter the architecture
Edwardian rooms take colour beautifully. Soft greens, warm clays, muted blues and gentle off whites all sit well with original woodwork. Painting deep skirting and picture rails in a tone close to the walls lets the proportions speak quietly, while a contrasting trim highlights the joinery for a more traditional look. If the room faces away from the sun, lean into warmth rather than fighting it with cool greys, which can feel flat under British light.
Respect the floor and finishing touches
Original floorboards or restored parquet give an Edwardian dining room real authenticity, and a large rug under the table softens sound and defines the dining zone. Curtains hung high and wide make the most of tall windows and frame the bay without blocking light. Finish with restraint, letting a few good pieces and the original features carry the room rather than crowding it. For a broader look at furniture that suits period homes, explore the full range at Furniture in Fashion, with free UK delivery on modern designs.
Frequently asked questions
Should I keep original Edwardian features in a dining room? Wherever possible, yes. Cornicing, picture rails and a bay window are the character of the house and give your scheme a head start, so work with them rather than covering them up.
What table material suits an Edwardian dining room? Solid timber such as oak or walnut sits naturally against period joinery and handles the generous proportions well. The warmth of wood echoes original features beautifully.
Can modern furniture work in a period home? It can, and a gentle contrast often feels fresh. Pair clean modern seating with original architecture, keeping the palette calm so the two read as a deliberate mix.
How high should I hang art in a tall room? Take advantage of the height and hang art a little higher than usual, often in step with the picture rail, so it suits the scale of the walls.
What colours suit Edwardian dining rooms? Soft greens, warm clays, muted blues and off whites all flatter original woodwork. Lean into warmth in rooms that face away from the sun.

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