high ceilings Tag

How to Choose a Sofa for a UK Home With High Ceilings

How to Choose a Sofa for a UK Home With High Ceilings

High ceilings give a UK living room a wonderful sense of space, but they change the rules of furnishing, and a sofa that suits an average room can look small and lost beneath a tall ceiling. This guide explains how to get the proportions right so a lofty space feels balanced rather than sparse. We look at understanding scale and choosing taller, more substantial sofas, filling generous floor space with corner sofas or facing pairs, and creating a sense of intimacy within the grandeur through rugs, inward facing seating and layered lighting. There is advice on balancing the vertical volume with tall bookcases, large artwork and floor to ceiling curtains, plus guidance on using warm colours and rich textures to keep a grand room welcoming. We finish with the finer details of side tables, lamps and coffee tables that keep everything in proportion, followed by a short set of common questions for anyone furnishing a home with high ceilings....

How to Style a Living Room With High Ceilings in a UK Period Property

How to Style a Living Room With High Ceilings in a UK Period Property

High ceilings are a hallmark of UK period properties, yet they can leave a living room feeling cold and unfinished without the right approach. This guide explains how to work with the vertical space rather than against it, from choosing furniture with genuine presence to layering lighting at several heights. We look at how tall bookcases, deep sofas and well placed artwork fill a lofty room, and how colour and texture can quietly soften grand proportions. You will also find advice on zoning a generous space and balancing original period features with contemporary pieces, along with a short FAQ to answer the most common questions about styling tall living rooms in older homes....

Tall Bookcases for UK Homes With High Ceilings

Tall Bookcases for UK Homes With High Ceilings

High ceilings are a quiet luxury in many UK homes, from Victorian terraces and Georgian townhouses to loft conversions and contemporary new builds. A tall bookcase completes the wall, gives the room proportion and turns the upper half of the space into something useful rather than bare. This guide looks at how tall a bookcase should be in different ceiling heights, which library and modern styles suit period and contemporary properties, and how to break a very tall wall with stacked designs that combine closed storage and open shelving. You will also find practical advice on lighting, styling shelves at height so the upper rows do not feel forgotten, and choosing materials that sit comfortably with original features. A short FAQ answers the most common questions British homeowners ask before they invest in a piece that has to live well at scale....

5 Tall Bookcase Ideas for UK Living Rooms With High Ceilings

5 Tall Bookcase Ideas for UK Living Rooms With High Ceilings

High ceilings give a UK living room a quiet sense of grandeur, but they can also leave the space feeling unfinished above eye level. A tall bookcase is one of the simplest ways to use that vertical room without crowding the floor plan. This guide looks at five practical approaches, from a single statement tower and twin bookcases around a chimney breast to a full library wall, a slim piece beside a sash window and an asymmetric pairing for awkward layouts. It also covers proportions, ceiling clearance, wall fixing and the small styling habits that keep tall shelves looking calm rather than cluttered. If your living room sits a little taller than average, these ideas will help you choose and style a bookcase that genuinely suits the space....

7 Ways to Make a High Ceilinged Living Room Feel Cosy

7 Ways to Make a High Ceilinged Living Room Feel Cosy

A high ceilinged living room sounds like a luxury, yet anyone who has lived inside one will tell you the volume can feel cooler and emptier than expected. The aim is not to shrink the room, but to make the height feel intentional and the lower part of the space rich enough to live in. This guide walks through seven practical ideas, from anchoring the seating with a generous rug and lowering pendant lighting to choosing art at scale and layering textiles for warmth. Pulling the wall colour down, choosing furniture with proper presence, and adding plants at varying heights all play their part. Whether the room sits inside a Victorian first floor flat, a converted chapel, or a barn renovation, the same principles apply. The result is a tall room that feels settled, warm, and quietly inhabited rather than echoing or distant....