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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

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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

What Layout Works Best for Family Living Rooms

What Layout Works Best for Family Living Rooms

Family living rooms are some of the hardest working spaces in a British home, and the right layout has to absorb daily chaos without falling apart. We look at how to plan a sitting room for family life, from choosing tough fabrics and a generous corner sofa to building in clever storage that children can actually use. The guide covers coffee tables that double as homework desks, footstools that earn their keep through hidden storage, and walking routes wide enough for fast moving little feet. We also explore quiet reading corners, rugs that can be cleaned and lighting flexible enough to shift from homework session to film night without rearranging the room....

How Do You Arrange Seating for Conversation

How Do You Arrange Seating for Conversation

Conversation thrives in well placed seating, and most British living rooms can support it with a little rearranging. We look at how to set up a sofa and chairs in a way that invites real talk rather than half hearted small chat, with thoughts on group shapes, sensible distances between seats and the surprising effect of slightly turning a chair inwards. The guide covers the role of tub chairs, chaise lounges and central coffee tables in shaping how a group settles in for an evening. We also examine lighting, acoustics and sightlines, and explain how to balance conversation seating with the television without giving up on either....

What Furniture Placement Works Best for Daily Living

What Furniture Placement Works Best for Daily Living

A living room layout that supports daily life is built around the small habits of the household rather than impressive showroom looks. We share a thoughtful approach to placing furniture for everyday living, beginning with a quiet audit of the activities that fill a typical week and the spots where each one actually happens. The guide covers favoured sofa positions, sensible drop zones near the door, storage placed close to use, and the role of the television as part of a layout rather than its centre. We also examine surface placement for drinks and books, layered lighting and the value of revisiting your layout twice a year as life changes....

How Do You Improve Movement in a Living Room Layout

How Do You Improve Movement in a Living Room Layout

A living room with poor flow is something you sense rather than see. We look at how to improve movement in a sitting room layout by mapping the daily routes that family members and visitors actually take, then refining the position of sofas, coffee tables, footstools and lamps to support those paths. The guide covers sensible clearances, the size and placement of rugs, the importance of door swings and the often overlooked role of visual flow as well as physical flow. We also touch on small habits like managing cables and clutter, and how subtle changes can transform a layout without buying anything new....

What Layout Works Best for Narrow Living Rooms

What Layout Works Best for Narrow Living Rooms

Long thin sitting rooms are common in older British terraces and converted flats, and they bring layout challenges that square spaces never raise. We look at how to plan a narrow living room without ending up with a corridor of furniture, starting with reading the room honestly and dividing its length into loose zones. The guide covers shorter sofas, console tables as spacers, restful floor treatments and the role of mirrors and curtains in stretching the perceived width. We also examine layered lighting along the length of the room and the small adjustments that turn an awkward shape into a comfortable layout for everyday family life.

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How Do You Create Zones in an Open Plan Living Room

How Do You Create Zones in an Open Plan Living Room

Open plan living rooms have become a fixture of modern British homes, but without careful zoning the space can feel shapeless. We share a practical approach to dividing an open plan layout into distinct lounge, dining and working areas without losing the airy quality that makes them so popular. The guide covers anchoring seating with a generous rug, floating the sofa as a soft divider, using sideboards and consoles as thresholds and adding vertical markers like pendants and plants. We also discuss layered lighting plans, restrained colour palettes and the balance between visual openness and clear function in homes where one room serves several daily roles....

What Is the Best Way to Arrange Furniture in a Small Living Room

What Is the Best Way to Arrange Furniture in a Small Living Room

Compact UK sitting rooms reward careful thinking about scale, storage and circulation. We share a practical approach to arranging furniture in a small living room, starting with a paper floor plan that reveals doors, radiators and other constraints often missed in the moment. The guide covers honest furniture sizing, why floating a sofa can pay off, the role of nesting tables and slim side units, and how walls and mirrors can quietly do most of the heavy lifting. We also explore tight colour palettes, sensible walking paths and the discipline of editing pieces back so the layout feels calm rather than crowded, drawing on common British home shapes from terraces to flats....

How Do You Design a Living Room Around a TV

How Do You Design a Living Room Around a TV

A television tends to claim a starring role in any sitting room, so designing the space around it takes a little forethought. We look at how to choose the right wall, set sensible viewing distances and anchor the main seating without making the layout feel like a cinema. From smart positioning of a TV unit and floating sofa arrangements to lighting that softens the screen and storage that hides cables, this guide covers the practical decisions that shape a comfortable family room. We also touch on what to do when a chimney breast complicates wall mounting, and why measuring before buying a new sofa always pays off in older British homes with their tricky alcoves and bay windows....

How Do You Make a Dining Room More Practical

How Do You Make a Dining Room More Practical

A practical dining room is not the opposite of a beautiful one. It is a beautiful one that has been thought through properly. The most practical dining rooms still look stunning, they just also work brilliantly for breakfast, homework, dinner parties and everything in between. Practicality is built from a hundred small decisions rather than three big ones. An extending table that grows with the day. Chairs you actually want to sit in for an hour, in fabrics that wipe clean. A bench on one side that seats children easily and tucks away cleanly. A sideboard that absorbs years of clutter. Hard wearing surfaces, sensible rugs, layered lighting, clear walking paths and small helpers like trays and hooks that catch the things that would otherwise live on the table. This guide sets out the practical layers that make a UK dining room genuinely earn its keep every day....

What Makes a Dining Room Hard to Use Daily

What Makes a Dining Room Hard to Use Daily

It is one of the stranger patterns in modern UK homes. Families spend thousands creating beautiful dining rooms and then eat in front of the television every night. The food, the family and the schedule are not usually the problem. The room itself is. A dining room that is hard to use daily carries specific friction. The chairs are uncomfortable, the table lives under a layer of post and school bags, the lighting is too harsh or too dim, the floor echoes, the route from the kitchen feels too long, and the styling is so formal that a Tuesday dinner feels out of place. Each of those problems is fixable once it is named. This guide walks through the friction points that quietly stop UK dining rooms being used day to day, and explains the practical changes that bring them back into daily life again....