Interior Design Tag

How to Add Texture to a Minimalist Living Room

How to Add Texture to a Minimalist Living Room

Minimalism only works when it feels warm rather than empty. A pared back room full of hard surfaces, flat walls, and very few accessories can quickly tip into looking cold, particularly in a UK climate where natural light shifts noticeably through the year. Texture is what stops this from happening. It adds depth and visual quiet without breaking the calm simplicity that minimalism relies on. This guide looks at practical ways to bring texture into a minimalist British living room while keeping the edited feel intact, starting with the walls and floor, then moving through rugs, soft furnishings, statement furniture, natural materials, and lighting. Each section explains how to add layers without losing the calm. The closing thought is the same throughout the guide. Edit the room first, then add a few quietly textured pieces, and the result will feel warmer without ever appearing cluttered....

How to Style a Living Room With Wooden Flooring

How to Style a Living Room With Wooden Flooring

Wooden flooring is one of the most common surfaces in British living rooms, but styling around it can be quietly tricky. Too much wood and the space turns into a sauna of brown tones. Too little, and the floor stops feeling intentional. In this guide we look at how to read the undertone of your boards, choose upholstery that adds the right contrast, layer wood tones without repetition and use rugs to soften the floor without hiding it. We also cover how lighting brings out the grain in the evenings and why the colour of skirting boards matters more than people think. The advice is shaped by the kind of homes we work with most often at Furniture in Fashion, where oak, walnut and reclaimed boards each ask for slightly different choices. By the end the floor will lead the room without dominating every other element....

How to Create a Cosy Living Room in a Modern New Build

How to Create a Cosy Living Room in a Modern New Build

Modern new build homes are bright, well proportioned and easy to live in, but their living rooms can feel a little impersonal in the first weeks after moving in. Smooth plaster, pale floors and clean architectural lines give a clear starting point, yet they offer few of the period details that older houses bring for free. Creating a cosy lounge in a new build is therefore a question of adding warmth in the right places rather than filling the room with more furniture. In this guide we cover the most useful changes, from a generously sized rug and layered lighting through to softer seating shapes, natural materials, considered art and quiet storage. A short FAQ at the end addresses common questions about why new build rooms feel cold and which single change tends to make the biggest difference....

9 Dining Room Storage Ideas Beyond the Sideboard

9 Dining Room Storage Ideas Beyond the Sideboard

The sideboard is no longer the only answer to dining room storage. With dining spaces now holding everything from drinks and books to serving pieces and table linen, a single sideboard rarely covers the ground. In this guide we share nine alternatives, ranging from display cabinets and open shelving to drinks trolleys, bookcases, benches and dressers. We look at slim consoles for tight rooms, fitted alcove cupboards in period homes and clever cabinets with fold down sections that double as serving surfaces. The advice is tuned for real UK dining rooms, where space is rarely generous and storage needs to do more than look smart. Whether your room hosts mainly dinners, doubles as a study or absorbs the overflow from a busy kitchen, you will find ideas to make storage work harder. A short FAQ rounds off the piece with reader questions....

How Do You Use Natural Light in Interior Design

How Do You Use Natural Light in Interior Design

Natural light shapes a home more than any single piece of furniture. It changes the colour of walls through the day, lifts texture in fabrics, and quietly tells the body when to wake and when to rest. In this guide we share how to make daylight work harder in British homes, where narrow terraces, long winters, and north facing rooms can all limit natural brightness. We cover how to study the light you already have, how mirrors travel daylight across a room, why slim and translucent furniture matters, and how window dressings, paint tones, and pale flooring help carry brightness deeper into the space. We also look at how layered lamps continue the day after sunset. Drawing on our experience working with UK homeowners, the advice is practical, easy to apply, and designed to help any room feel lighter and more welcoming....

How Do You Design a Home That Improves Daily Wellbeing

How Do You Design a Home That Improves Daily Wellbeing

A home that supports daily wellbeing is rarely the result of one big change. It comes from many small, considered decisions about light, layout, materials, and the way we actually live. From quieting visual clutter and layering lighting at different heights to defining zones in open plan rooms and turning the bedroom into a true place of rest, each choice shapes how we feel from morning to evening. In this guide we share practical, British home friendly advice on designing rooms that ease the mind and support better routines. We look at honest furniture choices, natural materials, gentle textures, and the role nature plays indoors. Drawing on our experience helping homeowners across the UK, we offer ideas that improve mood without demanding a full renovation, so your home can quietly become a place that helps rather than tires....

How Do You Keep Your Home Looking Modern Over Time

How Do You Keep Your Home Looking Modern Over Time

Keeping a home looking modern is rarely about buying new things. It is about quiet maintenance, regular editing, and a willingness to let space breathe. The interiors that feel freshest year after year are usually those that have been cared for in small steps rather than overhauled in dramatic ones. Restraint is the underlying principle, with surfaces left uncluttered and decorative pieces given room to be seen properly. Soft furnishings benefit from refresh every few years, while wall art, lighting, and small details such as cabinet handles can lift a room without replacing anything large. Rotating objects between rooms keeps familiar pieces feeling new, and resisting the urge to fill every empty corner protects the calm modern feeling. This guide explains how to maintain a contemporary home over the long term, with practical advice for UK households who want to stay current without constant spending....

How Do You Update a Home Without Fully Redesigning It

How Do You Update a Home Without Fully Redesigning It

Most homes do not need a complete redesign. They need a careful edit, a few thoughtful additions, and the patience to look again at what is already in the room. Lighting often delivers the fastest improvement, layered with table and floor lamps to soften flat overhead glow. Repositioning furniture before replacing it can change a room as completely as new purchases, while textiles in a coherent palette quietly tie the space together. A single statement piece, chosen for both function and character, often does more for a tired home than a full set of new items. Mirrors lift dark corners, considered art replaces busy gallery walls, and a gentle edit removes the visual clutter that has slowly settled into surfaces. This guide walks through a practical, calm approach to updating any UK home without disruption, expense, or the strain of starting from scratch....

What Colours Improve Focus and Productivity at Home

What Colours Improve Focus and Productivity at Home

Working from home has changed how we think about decoration. The walls around a desk are no longer just decorative; they shape mood, attention, and stamina across long working hours. Greens such as sage, eucalyptus and soft olive consistently support sustained concentration because the eye finds them easy to process. Soft blues encourage steady, methodical thinking, while warm neutrals like oatmeal and bone protect the eyes from the glare of stark white. Yellow can lift mood when used as a small accent, but works against focus in larger doses. Red is best handled cautiously, in muted forms such as burgundy or terracotta. Lighting matters as much as the colour itself, with daylight bulbs supporting alertness during the day and warmer table lamps helping you wind down. The most productive home offices balance research backed colour choices with personal response, and they always test the shade in the actual room....