A reading corner asks very little: a comfortable seat, somewhere to rest a cup and enough light to keep your eyes happy for an hour or two. Getting the lamp right is what separates a working nook from a pretty but unused corner. The following guide walks through how to plan the space, choose between floor and table lamps, and finish the corner so it earns its place in a real UK home.
The chair sets the tone for everything else. A high backed wing chair calls for a taller lamp positioned slightly behind the shoulder. A lower lounger or chaise pairs better with a floor lamp that arches over the seat from behind. Look at the lounge chaise chairs selection if you have space for a longer profile, or stick with a tub style chair for tighter corners.
A floor lamp is the more flexible option in most cases. It frees up the side table, can be angled over the page and adds height to the corner. A floor lamp with an adjustable arm sits closer to the book without dominating the wider room. Table lamps suit corners where the chair already has a substantial side table, or where a pair of lamps balances symmetry elsewhere.
For most readers, the light source should be behind the shoulder and slightly to the side of your reading hand, throwing light onto the page rather than into your eyes. The bottom of the shade is best at roughly the same height as your eye when you are seated, so the bulb itself stays hidden. If the lamp casts a sharp pool of light directly on the page, the placement is working.
For reading, a slightly cooler bulb than the rest of the room can be welcome. Around 3000K still reads as warm but offers a touch more contrast on the page than 2700K. Aim for at least 600 lumens at the chair, which usually means a bulb in the range of seven to nine watts for an LED. Dimmable bulbs are worth the small extra cost, as a softer setting suits evening reading once your eyes have settled.
A reading corner is not complete without somewhere to rest a mug, your phone face down and the book itself when you pause. A round side table at roughly the same height as the arm of the chair keeps everything within reach. Smaller tables with a lower shelf below are useful for stashing the current pile of books out of sight.
A reading corner is a quiet area, so the textiles need to work harder. A wool throw across the chair, a small cushion at the lower back and a rug under the chair all soften the acoustics and make longer sessions more comfortable. Keep the colour palette restrained: two tones plus a neutral is enough.
The most common error is hanging a pendant directly over the chair. It looks dramatic in photographs but throws light onto the top of the head rather than the page, leaving the book in shadow. The second mistake is using only an overhead light from the main room, which produces glare across glasses and a tired feeling after twenty minutes. A dedicated lamp at the side solves both problems.
If the reading corner sits within a larger room, give it visual identity. A small rug under the chair, a different paint colour on the wall behind, or a tall plant alongside the lamp all signal that this is its own zone. Browse the wider table lamps range at Furniture in Fashion if you want a base that doubles as a sculptural object during the day.
Stacks of books on the floor become clutter quickly. A narrow bookcase, a wall mounted shelf or a basket beside the chair keeps the corner tidy without trips back to the main shelves. Where wall space is short, a slim shelf at chair arm height holds the current read and a small lamp at the same time.
The best reading corners feel like they happened by accident, but they are almost always planned. A chair that fits the space, a lamp placed thoughtfully behind the shoulder, a small table within reach and a soft layer of textiles is the working recipe. From there, the room can grow around it without losing the quiet that makes the corner worth using in the first place.
Around 600 lumens at the chair is comfortable for most adults, which is broadly equivalent to a seven to nine watt LED bulb.
Floor lamps are usually more flexible because they free up the side table and can be angled over the page. Table lamps suit corners with a generous side table and a lower chair.
Behind the shoulder and slightly to the side of your reading hand, with the bottom of the shade at roughly eye level when seated.
Around 3000K offers a touch more contrast than the typical 2700K bedroom light, while still reading as warm rather than cold.
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