Radiators are one of those features almost every UK home has to live with, yet they rarely get much thought when it comes to decorating. Often placed under windows or along the most useful walls, they can interrupt a scheme just where you least want them to. With a little planning, though, a radiator can blend into a room or even become a tidy part of the design rather than an eyesore.
The first step is to accept where the radiator sits and plan around it. Fighting its position usually leads to awkward layouts and cold rooms. Most radiators are placed under windows for good reason, as the rising warm air counters the draught from the glass. Rather than hiding this, treat the wall as a zone to style thoughtfully, keeping the area in front clear so heat can circulate freely.
The wall above a radiator is prime decorating space. A piece of art, a wall mirror or a row of frames draws the eye upward and away from the radiator itself. A mirror is especially useful, as it bounces light around the room and makes the space feel larger. Just leave a sensible gap above the radiator so rising heat does not sit against the frame.
Furniture placed too close to a radiator can absorb warmth that should be heating the room. A slim console table set slightly away from the wall is a neat way to use the space without blocking output. Beside seating, a compact side table keeps essentials to hand while leaving the radiator clear. When arranging a room, our living room furniture offers plenty of slim and freestanding pieces that suit tricky radiator walls.
If a radiator really bothers you, a cover can soften its look, but choose one with an open grille so warmth still escapes. The top of a radiator cover doubles as a useful shelf for lamps, plants or books, which helps it read as furniture rather than a screen. Avoid placing a deep sideboard directly in front of a radiator, as solid pieces trap heat and waste energy.
Sometimes the simplest answer is to change how the radiator looks. Painting it to match the wall lets it recede, while a column or panel style in a considered finish can become a feature in its own right. Modern designs come in shapes and colours that suit contemporary rooms far better than the plain panels of old. Whichever route you take, you can shop modern furniture across the UK with us at Furniture in Fashion, with free UK delivery, to complete the look around it.
Because so many radiators sit beneath windows, curtains and blinds play a part in how well they work. Full length curtains that fall in front of a radiator trap warmth against the glass, sending heat straight back out through the window. Where a radiator sits under a window, sill length curtains or a neat blind let the warmth reach the room as intended. This small adjustment keeps both the heating and the look working in your favour.
A radiator wall does not have to be wasted space. A reading chair set a comfortable distance away makes good use of the warmth on a cold evening. A console behind a sofa that floats in the room can sit near a radiator without blocking it, giving you a surface for lamps and books. Think of the warmth as something to enjoy rather than hide, and the radiator becomes part of how the room is used rather than a problem to solve.
Slim, open pieces such as a console table set away from the wall are fine, but avoid solid furniture that sits flush against it, as this traps heat and reduces efficiency.
Yes, provided you leave a gap so rising heat does not build up against the frame. Mirrors above radiators are a popular way to reflect light and lift the wall.
A poorly designed cover can. Choose one with an open grille and enough space around the radiator, and the effect on warmth will be minimal.
Painting a radiator to match the wall helps it blend in and is a quick way to make it less noticeable in a busy scheme.
Slim vertical panels and flat fronted designs work well in contemporary rooms, saving wall space and offering a cleaner look than traditional ribbed models.
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