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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

How Do You Design Interiors That Age Well

How Do You Design Interiors That Age Well

Some interiors look tired within twelve months. Others still feel right after a decade. The difference is rarely budget. It is usually a set of quiet decisions made early, about materials, palette, proportion, and what you choose to leave out. We look at how to design rooms that age gracefully, from the materials that improve with use to the trend colours best left in cushions, and from the value of investing in everyday pieces to the importance of getting scale right before style. The interiors that survive a decade tend to share a few honest traits. They use natural materials, accept gentle mismatches, hold a quiet palette, and leave a little room for change. We share the principles we apply daily and the small mistakes we see most often, so that the rooms you build now still feel like home in five and ten years time....

What Makes a Home Feel Modern in 2026

What Makes a Home Feel Modern in 2026

A modern home in 2026 is calmer, warmer, and more deliberate than the looks that came before. Strong silhouettes have softened into rounded forms, all white palettes have given way to oat and clay tones, and storage has learned to disappear into the room rather than announce itself. The most current interiors mix two or three materials with restraint, layer their lighting carefully, and let the architecture of the room breathe. We explore what makes a home read as modern this year, including the quiet shift toward warmer minimalism, considered texture, and furniture sized properly to British rooms. Whether you are updating a Victorian terrace or a new build flat, the principles stay the same. Modern in 2026 is less about looking new and more about feeling settled, considered, and easy to live in across the seasons. Read on for our practical guide to getting your space right....

How Do You Design a Home That Actually Works

How Do You Design a Home That Actually Works

A home that looks good but does not work is a frustrating place to live. Doors get blocked, sofas sit too deep for the room, and surfaces collect clutter because there is nowhere obvious to put anything down. A working home, by contrast, supports daily life without effort, with pieces in the right place and a layout that matches how the household actually moves. In this article, we share our approach to designing a home that genuinely works for British households. We start with the patterns of a normal weekday, then look at scale, storage, and lighting that suit the task. We also explore the small frictions that quietly drain energy from a home, and how planning for the next five years can shape the choices you make today. Practical, considered, and built around real life rather than a catalogue image....

What Makes a Home Feel Complete

What Makes a Home Feel Complete

A complete home is not always a finished one. The most appealing British homes are often still evolving, but they share a quiet sense of cohesion. The rooms speak to one another, the materials echo across spaces, and nothing important feels missing. In this article, we look at the layers that tend to make a home feel complete, from a consistent material thread running through different rooms to layered lighting that brings depth in the evening. We also explore why the spaces between rooms, the hallways, landings, and corners, often decide whether a home settles or feels disjointed. Surfaces that show real life, rooms that handle the day, and a calm steadiness underneath it all play their part. The aim is not to finish a home, but to help it feel considered, settled, and quietly cohesive across every room you live in....

How Do You Balance Style Comfort and Function in Interiors

How Do You Balance Style Comfort and Function in Interiors

Balancing style, comfort, and function in a British home is a quiet challenge most rooms get only partly right. A space might look striking but feel cold, or feel cosy but read as cluttered. The aim is to bring all three together so the room looks considered, feels relaxed, and actually supports daily life. In this article, we share the practical approach we follow with our customers, beginning with the brief for the room rather than the style. We look at why true comfort depends on the whole space rather than only the seating, why function tends to hide in plain sight, and why style works best as the final layer. We also discuss the three common pitfalls that throw rooms off balance, from overscaled furniture to unworkable lighting, and how to refine a room over time once you start living with it....

What Interior Design Principles Matter Most Today

What Interior Design Principles Matter Most Today

Interior design has shifted in subtle but meaningful ways. The principles that shape British homes today lean towards function, calm, and long lasting choices rather than purely decorative gestures. From honest materials and layered lighting to comfort that does not dominate the room, the rules at play now reflect how households actually live, work, and rest in their spaces. In this article, we explore the principles we see most often in current British interiors. We look at why function comes before decoration, how restraint creates calm, and why details now carry the personality of a room. We also consider why long term thinking has become central to furniture choices, and how this affects the pieces households now reach for. Whether you are refreshing one room or rethinking a whole home, these are the foundations worth understanding before any colour or style decisions are made....

How Do You Create a Space That Feels Effortless

How Do You Create a Space That Feels Effortless

Creating a space that feels effortless is rarely about big gestures. It is about small, considered choices that let a room breathe and rest the eye. From understanding how you actually live in a space to choosing a calm material palette and editing what does not earn its place, the path to an easy interior runs through quiet decisions rather than grand statements. Lighting layers, thoughtful layouts, and gentle textures all play their part in shaping a room that looks at ease without trying too hard. In this article, we explore the principles behind effortless British interiors and how each one can be applied in your own home. From sofa positioning to lamp placement, every detail contributes to the wider feeling. The aim is not to follow a trend but to build a space that genuinely supports the way you live, day after day, with calm and quiet confidence....

How Do You Design for Comfort Without Losing Style

How Do You Design for Comfort Without Losing Style

Comfort and style are often treated as opposites, yet the warmest rooms in UK homes are usually the most stylish too. The secret lies in layering, in choosing materials that age gracefully and in selecting furniture that supports the body rather than just photographing well. A sofa with a generous seat depth, an armchair tucked beside a tall lamp and a chaise positioned for long Sunday afternoons all bring different kinds of comfort into a room. Soft cushions, casually draped throws, warm lighting and rugs underfoot complete the picture. We have helped UK customers find the balance between visual calm and physical ease, and the same lessons appear again and again. Edit personal touches rather than scatter them, choose materials that feel good to the touch, and build the lighting in three layers. This guide explains how to design rooms that look beautiful without sacrificing the comfort daily life requires....

What Makes a Room Practical for Daily Use

What Makes a Room Practical for Daily Use

A practical room is rarely a stripped back room. It is welcoming, well lit and easy to use, with every piece earning its space. We have spent years helping UK households shape rooms that look composed and behave well throughout daily life. The patterns are consistent, regardless of style. Right sized furniture, layered lighting at three different heights, hidden storage that disappears into the architecture, and surfaces placed exactly where they are needed. A bookcase in a quiet alcove anchors the room. A footstool brings comfort within reach. Easy clean materials such as glass, sealed wood and quality leather survive busy households without complaint. Personal touches still matter, but they are edited rather than scattered. This guide explores the principles behind a room that supports real life, with notes on proportion, lighting layers, surfaces and the kind of comfort that turns a beautiful room into a genuinely useful one....

How Do You Improve Home Layout Without Renovation

How Do You Improve Home Layout Without Renovation

Rearranging a room often delivers more than a full renovation. Most UK homes have layout problems caused by furniture working against the architecture rather than with it. A weekend with a tape measure and a willingness to experiment can change how a space looks and feels without any structural work. The principles are surprisingly simple. Map the natural flow of light and movement, float seating away from walls, define zones with rugs and use mirrors to multiply daylight. Slim consoles fill empty walls, room dividers reshape open plan spaces and tall lamps soften awkward corners. Even shifting the television from its expected wall can free a room into a more grown up version of itself. We have helped many UK homeowners reshape rooms with their existing furniture and a fresh perspective. This guide gathers the strongest layout fixes that need no builders, no permission and no significant budget....