Furniture in Fashion Blog
Furniture in Fashion Blog
Furniture in Fashion Blog
Understanding north facing light
A north facing living room receives steady, indirect daylight rather than the warm, shifting sun that southern aspects enjoy. In the UK this can leave a room feeling cool and a little flat, especially through the autumn and winter months. The light is not poor, it is simply even and on the cool side, which means the usual advice to embrace bright white walls often backfires and leaves the space looking grey. The trick with a north facing room is to work with that quality of light and add warmth deliberately, rather than fighting it.
Once you accept that the room will lean cool, the decisions become clearer. You are aiming to introduce warmth through colour, lighting and material, while bouncing what natural light you have as far into the room as possible.
Choose colours that add warmth
Cool, pale colours can look clinical in north facing light, so it pays to choose shades with a warm undertone. Soft creams, warm stone, gentle terracotta and muted ochre all hold their warmth even under indirect daylight. Deeper, characterful colours can work beautifully too, since a north facing room that will never be bright can instead be made cosy and enveloping with a richer tone.
Bring those warm tones into the seating as well as the walls. A sofa in a warm neutral or a soft, earthy shade helps counter the coolness of the light. Our fabric sofas come in a range of warm, grounded colours that suit these rooms, and a textile finish always feels cosier than a cooler, harder surface in a space that lacks direct sun.
Layer your lighting
Lighting is the single most important tool in a north facing room. A single ceiling light will only emphasise how flat the daylight is, so the aim is several warm sources at different heights. A floor lamp beside the sofa adds a pool of warmth exactly where you sit, while a table lamp on a sideboard or side table lifts the corners of the room that daylight never quite reaches.
Choose warm toned bulbs throughout, since cooler bulbs only add to the chill. By switching on a few lamps even during the day, you can lift a north facing room considerably and give it the warmth its aspect denies it. Layered lighting like this also lets you change the mood from bright and practical to soft and relaxed as the evening draws in.
Reflect what light you have
Making the most of the available daylight is the other half of the task. Keep windows as clear as possible and avoid heavy dressings that block the limited light. A large wall mirror placed to catch and reflect the window will spread daylight further into the room and add a welcome sense of brightness. Position it where it reflects the window or a lamp rather than a dark corner, so it returns light rather than shadow.
Glossy and reflective surfaces help in smaller ways too. A glass or polished table top, a metallic accent or a satin finish on a cushion all catch and pass on light, which adds gentle life to an otherwise even room. Used sparingly, these touches stop a warm, cosy scheme from feeling heavy.
Bringing the room to life
A north facing living room is not a problem to solve so much as a character to dress for. Choose warm toned colours, layer several sources of warm light, reflect the daylight you have and lean into cosiness rather than chasing brightness. With those principles in place, the steady northern light becomes an asset, giving the room a calm and consistent atmosphere through the day. To plan seating, lighting and finishing pieces together, explore the living room furniture range at Furniture in Fashion, where you can shop modern designs across the UK with free delivery.
Frequently asked questions
Should I paint a north facing room white? Bright white often looks grey in north facing light. Warm whites, creams and stone tones hold their warmth far better, and deeper cosy colours can also work well.
How do I warm up a cool north facing living room? Use warm toned paint and upholstery, layer several warm light sources at different heights and choose warm bulbs throughout to counter the cool daylight.
Do mirrors help in a north facing room? Yes. A large mirror positioned to reflect the window spreads the available daylight further into the room and adds a sense of brightness without extra light fittings.
What colours should I avoid? Cool, stark whites and icy blues tend to emphasise the chill of north facing light, so they are best used sparingly or warmed with other tones and good lighting.

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