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Modern Living Room Ideas UK – Sofas, Coffee Tables, TV Units & Storage

Small Living Room Furniture Ideas

Bedroom Furniture Ideas UK – Beds, Wardrobes, Drawers & Storage Tips

Bedroom Storage Ideas for Modern Homes

Dining Room Furniture Trends UK – Dining Tables, Chairs, Sideboards & Sets

Dining Table and Chairs Buying Tips

Home Office Furniture Ideas UK – Desks, Chairs, Storage & Workspace Design

Home Office Desk and Chair Ideas

Small Space Furniture Ideas UK – Compact, Storage & Space Saving Solutions

Garden Furniture Ideas UK – Rattan Sets, Dining Sets, Sun Loungers & Outdoor Style

Garden Furniture Buying Guide

Furniture Buying Guides UK – Sofas, Beds, Tables, Storage & Room Planning

Furniture Sale Tips and Styling Advice

Welcome to the Furniture in Fashion Blog, your source for modern furniture inspiration UK. Dive into our expert styling tips, trend reports and buying guides for the living room, dining room, bedroom and home office. Whether you’re refreshing your décor or furnishing your entire home, explore ideas to help you choose the right pieces, finishes and layouts. Stay ahead of trends, shop smarter and enjoy fresh content from the trusted brand Furniture in Fashion

Furniture in Fashion | Interior Design Ideas For Your Home

What Makes a Space Feel Real and Comfortable

What Makes a Space Feel Real and Comfortable

Comfort is the word people reach for when describing a home they admire, yet it is rarely about a single feature. A genuinely comfortable space pulls together seating, lighting, scale, texture and even sound, with each element doing quiet work in the background. In this guide we look at the different layers that build real comfort, from the depth of a sofa and the warmth of a footstool to the way a rug softens both floor and acoustics. We discuss the importance of layered lighting that matches the time of day, the role of breathing room around furniture, and why durable, forgiving fabrics make a home easier to live in. Whether you are working with a compact London flat or a wider family home, the same principles apply. By focusing on a few well made pieces and a handful of small upgrades, any space can begin to feel genuinely settled....

How Do You Avoid Making Your Home Look Generic

How Do You Avoid Making Your Home Look Generic

Many British homes look strikingly similar, with the same grey sofa, oak effect floor and mass produced wall print appearing across new builds and renovations alike. Avoiding a generic interior is rarely about budget. It is about making different decisions earlier in the process. In this guide we explore why so many rooms feel interchangeable, how trend driven shopping flattens character, and what small changes lift a home above the ordinary. We look at the role of layered lighting, the value of off centre arrangements, the power of a single statement piece and the quiet impact of upgrading details such as door handles or skirting. We also consider how shopping slowly, mixing eras and using existing belongings can transform a flat without major spending. By the end you should have a clear, practical sense of how to build a home that feels distinctly yours rather than copied from a catalogue....

What Is the “Lived-In” Interior Design Trend

What Is the “Lived-In” Interior Design Trend

The "lived in" look has quietly shifted from a casual compliment to one of the defining UK interior moods of recent years. It celebrates rooms that grow over time, with sofas, sideboards and rugs that gather warmth through use rather than fading from it. Drawing on European country homes, Scandinavian hygge and Japanese wabi sabi, the style values softness, layering and personal history above showroom precision. It works just as well in a small London flat as in a wider rural home, and it suits modern furniture as comfortably as it suits older pieces. In this guide we explore where the trend comes from, the principles that hold it together, the materials that suit it, and the small, slow choices that build it at home. We also look at the common mistakes to avoid and explain why this gentle, unhurried approach feels right for so many British homes today....

How Do You Combine Different Lighting Types

How Do You Combine Different Lighting Types

A well lit room rarely depends on a single fitting. The most comfortable spaces in UK homes use several types of lighting working together, each playing a slightly different role. Ambient lighting offers general brightness, task lighting helps with focused activities and accent lighting gives the room personality. Knowing how to combine these layers is what turns a serviceable space into one that feels considered, easy to live in and adaptable through the day. This guide explains the three main types of lighting, why mixing heights and directions matters, how to coordinate fittings without making everything match and how to use dimmers and switches to bring the layers together. It also covers practical tips for testing a lighting plan at different times of day so the room feels right whether the sky is bright, overcast or fully dark outside the window of a typical UK home....

What Makes Lighting Feel Warm and Inviting

What Makes Lighting Feel Warm and Inviting

A warm and welcoming room rarely comes from one bright fitting. It is shaped by how light falls across surfaces, gathers in corners and softens the edges of the space. In UK homes, where the evenings are long and the weather often pulls people indoors, the difference between cold and inviting lighting becomes especially clear after dark. This guide explores the small choices that make a room feel cosy, from selecting warmer colour temperatures and adding diffused shades to layering wall lights, table lamps and floor lamps at different heights. It also looks at the role of decorative sources such as candles and accent lights, and explains why a perfectly even brightness rarely feels welcoming. The result is a home that quietly invites people in rather than pushing them away with glare, and that feels just as comfortable in winter as it does in summer....

How Do You Use Lighting to Highlight Furniture

How Do You Use Lighting to Highlight Furniture

A handsome sofa, a sculptural coffee table or a finely finished sideboard can all be undone by poor lighting. Without the right light, even the most considered furniture begins to fade into the background of a room. Highlighting furniture with thoughtful lighting is less about drama and more about giving each piece the attention it quietly deserves. This guide walks through how to choose direction over brightness, where to place table lamps for a balanced sideboard composition, how high to hang a pendant above a dining table and why accent lighting is the layer that brings furniture to life. It also covers common mistakes, including the urge to light every corner of a room equally. With a few simple adjustments, a UK living room, dining area or bedroom can feel curated rather than cluttered, with every piece of furniture earning its place in the overall room....

What Lighting Creates the Best Mood at Home

What Lighting Creates the Best Mood at Home

Mood is one of the most overlooked ingredients in a comfortable home, and lighting is what shapes it more than almost any other element. The colour, brightness, height and direction of every fitting all influence how a room feels at any given moment. A bright cool toned ceiling light can keep a kitchen alert in the morning, while a softer warm bulb in a sideboard lamp can make a living room feel calm at night. This guide explores the small, practical changes that lift the atmosphere of a UK home, from choosing the right colour temperature and adding a dimmer, to layering smaller light sources at lower heights. It also looks at how outdoor lighting and gentle accent sources contribute to the feeling of a settled, lived in space. The goal is a home that responds to the natural rhythm of the day rather than fighting it, even on dark winter evenings....

How Do You Design Lighting for Different Rooms

How Do You Design Lighting for Different Rooms

Lighting is one of the quietest decisions in a home, yet it shapes how every room feels and functions. A kitchen needs clear, shadow free brightness for cooking and reading recipes, while a bedroom calls for something far softer at the close of the day. Living rooms shift from lively daytime spaces to calm evening retreats, and bathrooms must combine clarity with restfulness. By looking at lighting room by room, and by layering ambient, task and accent sources together, a UK home can feel more considered, more comfortable and easier to use throughout the year. This guide walks through the lighting needs of the main rooms in a typical UK home, from hallways and living areas to bedrooms, kitchens and home offices, with practical advice on bulb tones, fitting heights and the role of dimmers. The result is a calm, well lit home that quietly supports daily life....

How Do You Combine Trends Without Clashing

How Do You Combine Trends Without Clashing

Combining different interior trends without clashing is more about restraint and rhythm than strict rules. Most British homes naturally hold a mix of periods, finishes and influences, and the art lies in letting them coexist with quiet confidence. This guide explores how to settle on a lead mood, share one unifying element across every piece, and use lighting, rugs and textures as the gentle glue that holds a layered scheme together. You will find practical advice on mixing eras through materials rather than shapes, limiting the number of statement pieces, and using the hallway to set a steady tone for the rest of the house. Whether your home leans modern, classic or somewhere in between, these principles help different trends sit together with ease. Read on for a measured, considered approach that lets you enjoy the styles you love without ever creating a busy or competing room....

What Trends Will Last Beyond 2026

What Trends Will Last Beyond 2026

Some interior trends fade with the season, while others quietly belong to the decade ahead. The directions worth planning around are those built on lasting human habits, comfort, calm bedrooms, layered lighting, natural materials and sustainable craftsmanship. This guide explores which trends will continue to shape UK homes beyond 2026, and how to identify them before making any major purchase. From corner sofas that anchor living rooms and marble coffee tables that quietly elevate a scheme, to wardrobes that work as architecture in compact spaces, the focus is on choices that grow with you rather than against you. You will also find practical advice on how to introduce these directions gradually, plus a short FAQ covering the questions readers ask most before investing in furniture for the long term. Read on for a calm, considered look at the future of British interiors and the trends already proving their staying power....