Furniture in Fashion Blog
Furniture in Fashion Blog
Furniture in Fashion Blog
The Quiet Power of Better Storage
When a UK home feels crowded, the answer is rarely more furniture. It is usually better organised storage. The same room can feel twice as spacious once the floor is clear, surfaces are tidy and the things you actually need are within reach. We hear this often from customers at Furniture in Fashion, who tell us that the right storage piece changed how they felt about a whole room.
Wardrobes That Use Vertical Space
Bedrooms tend to swallow the most belongings, and the wardrobe is usually the hardest working item. Choose a tall wardrobe over a wide, low one. The vertical orientation lifts the eye, which makes ceilings feel higher, and uses the space above the rails for boxed seasonal clothing. Sliding door designs are particularly effective in tighter rooms, since they do not need swing clearance. The wardrobes range includes options from compact two door styles to wider configurations for larger bedrooms.
Ottomans and Blanket Boxes
Few pieces of furniture earn their footprint quite like a blanket box. It absorbs bedding, throws and seasonal items while doubling as a bench or footrest. At the foot of a bed, it adds a soft pause between mattress and door, which makes the room feel finished. The blanket box selection covers timber, fabric and leather options that work across different bedroom styles. Ottomans serve a similar purpose in living rooms, offering a coffee table surface, an extra seat and hidden storage in one piece.
Sideboards as Living Room Workhorses
A sideboard does more than hold display objects. Its drawers and cupboards swallow remote controls, charging cables, paperwork, photo albums and table linens. By containing these everyday items, it removes visual noise from the rest of the room, which is the single biggest reason rooms start to feel small. A clean sided sideboard along the longest wall acts as a calming anchor that makes a sofa zone feel intentional.
Open Shelving That Lifts the Walls
Walls in UK homes are often left half empty. Open shelving turns this dead vertical space into useful storage and display, especially above sofas, behind doors and along narrow corridors. Choose floating shelves for a streamlined look, or a tall shelving unit for a heavier load. The storage furniture selection lists both, allowing you to pick the depth and length that suits your wall.
Beds With Built In Storage
For households where a chest of drawers or wardrobe simply cannot fit, an ottoman bed or drawer bed becomes the natural answer. The space beneath the mattress is usually wasted, but a lift up frame turns it into one of the largest storage compartments in the home. This single change can rescue a small bedroom that feels overrun, especially in a one bedroom flat.
Hallway Pieces That Earn Their Footprint
A small console with deep drawers prevents post and keys from spreading across kitchen worktops. A bench with hidden storage stops shoes from cluttering the floor by the front door. Even a tall, narrow shoe cabinet can quietly contain twenty pairs in less than half a metre of floor space. Hallway clutter often spreads to other rooms, so taming it here pays dividends throughout the home.
Small Habits That Multiply the Effect
Storage furniture works best when paired with a few simple habits. Group similar items together so you can find them quickly. Keep a small basket near the front door for the bits and pieces that gather there each day. Reset the most lived in surfaces, such as the coffee table and kitchen worktops, every evening. None of this takes long, and the cumulative effect is striking.
Choosing Finishes That Recede
To make a room feel larger, choose storage that does not shout. Pale oak, soft grey, white and warm taupe finishes blend with most wall colours and let the eye glide past. Statement pieces are wonderful in their own right, but in a small home one or two are enough. The rest of the storage should fade into the background, doing its job quietly so the rest of the room can breathe.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does an ottoman bed really replace a chest of drawers?
For seasonal clothing, bedding and bulky items, yes. For daily access to socks and underwear, a separate small chest is still useful.
How much storage furniture should one room contain?
Enough to hold what you use, with around 15 to 20 percent spare capacity. Filling every cupboard to the brim makes finding items frustrating and tempts clutter to creep back.
What is a space saving wardrobe style?
Sliding door wardrobes save the swing space that hinged doors need, which can free up around 60 to 80 centimetres of floor in front of the unit.
Are floating shelves strong enough for books?
When fixed correctly into solid masonry or studs with rated brackets, yes. Always check the load rating before stacking heavy items.
Do hallway benches really make a difference?
They contain shoes, give people somewhere to sit while putting on coats and stop bags from being dropped on the floor. The everyday impact is much bigger than the size of the piece suggests.

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