The pages of British interiors magazines tend to share a certain visual language. Rooms feel collected rather than decorated, materials are layered with restraint, and there is always a sense of comfort sitting underneath the styling. Pulling some of these ideas into an everyday UK home is easier than it looks.
Below are six ideas taken from the styling we see most often in editorial features, adapted for real homes with real budgets.
A common thread across many British interiors features is the use of heritage colours, such as deep greens, ochres, and dusky reds, balanced with simpler modern furniture. The contrast keeps the room from feeling like a period reproduction. A plain modern sofa in muted linen sits comfortably against a deep painted wall, while a more traditional armchair adds depth and a sense of history.
Our fabric sofas range includes simple, modern shapes that pair well with bolder paint colours.
A magazine styled living room rarely uses one wood. Pale oak floors might sit with a walnut coffee table and a darker timber bookcase. The trick is to keep at least two of the tones within the same temperature, either warm or cool. This avoids the room feeling pieced together from unrelated stock.
A wooden coffee table acts as the anchor for this kind of layering, with smaller side pieces echoing the tone elsewhere in the room.
Editorial rooms almost never rely on a single ceiling light. Look closely and you will usually see at least three sources, often a floor lamp, a table lamp, and a wall light or pendant. The mix creates pools of light at different heights, which feels considered rather than purely functional.
For a quick lift, add a single floor lamp beside the sofa and a small table lamp on a side table. Switch off the overhead light in the evening and let the smaller lights take over. Our table lamps selection offers pieces that suit a range of styles.
A surprising number of homes hang art too high. UK interiors magazines tend to place artwork with its centre at roughly 145 to 150cm from the floor, or just above the back of a sofa with around 20cm of space between the frame and the cushion. Lower placement creates a more relaxed, lived in look.
A single larger piece often reads better than a small gallery wall in a compact room, though a thoughtful trio can work above a long sideboard.
Almost every editorial photograph features one piece that breaks the rectangular rhythm of the room. It might be a curved ceramic vase, a rounded floor lamp, or a sculptural side table. The contrast between straight lines and a single soft shape adds interest without clutter.
Choose one such piece and give it space to be seen. It rarely needs more than that to draw the eye.
Magazines consistently feature rooms with linen, wool, jute, and rattan. These materials add quiet texture that photographs well and feels comfortable in real life. A wool throw on the sofa, a jute rug under the coffee table, and a linen cushion or two are usually enough.
Our rugs range includes natural fibre designs that suit British homes well, particularly in older properties with original floors.
Editorial living rooms feel composed because every element earns its place. There is rarely a wasted accessory or filler piece. When updating your own room, edit before adding. Remove anything that feels unconsidered, then introduce a few thoughtful new elements. The result feels far closer to the magazines than buying a large set of new pieces ever would.
We stock a wide selection across our living room furniture range, which makes it easy to refresh one or two pieces at a time rather than redoing the whole room.
The styling is usually edited carefully. Rooms feel collected over time, with restrained colour palettes and a balance of older and newer pieces.
Keep at least two of your wood tones within the same temperature, either warm or cool. One contrasting tone can then add depth without clashing.
Multiple light sources create depth and atmosphere. Single overhead lights flatten a room, while floor and table lamps soften corners.
They can work, but a single larger artwork often suits smaller British living rooms better. Magazines tend to favour considered, simpler placements.
One sculptural object, a textured rug, and a balanced lighting plan add more character than a dozen smaller accessories ever could.
Corners are the most overlooked part of any room, often left empty or used as…
Getting the scale of furniture right is the quiet reason some rooms feel comfortable and…
Renovating a UK home is rarely done all at once. Most households work through it…
Shelving can be one of the most useful features in a UK living room or…
Living in a small UK home does not mean compromising on comfort or style. From…
New build homes across the UK offer a tempting blank slate, with crisp walls, level…
This website uses cookies.