Office Furniture Tag

How to Choose a Desk for a Shared Home Working Space

How to Choose a Desk for a Shared Home Working Space

Sharing a home working space takes more thought than setting up a desk for one person. From how each of you uses the room, to materials, shapes, cable routing and the way the area looks once laptops close, every choice nudges the day in a slightly different direction. The right desk supports both routines without crowding the room, while the wrong one can leave you stepping over chairs and apologising on calls. This guide walks through how to measure the room, choose between long single desks and corner setups, weigh up wooden, glass and high gloss finishes, and plan for the evenings when the office quietly becomes a guest room again. The goal is a calm shared space that works for both of you, day after day, without one person constantly working around the other, however demanding the week happens to become....

5 Office Furniture Ideas for Working From Home Full Time

5 Office Furniture Ideas for Working From Home Full Time

Working from home full time changes the demands you place on a room. A laptop on the kitchen table works as a short term solution, but over the months it begins to wear on posture, focus and the boundary between work and the rest of the day. The right furniture turns a quiet corner into a proper workspace, one that supports long hours yet recedes into the room when the working day is done. In this guide we look at the five pieces of furniture that come up again and again with our customers who have moved to permanent remote work. A desk built for deeper screen time, closed storage that hides clutter, a chair that supports the spine, considered lighting and a quiet second seat for calls each play a different role in shaping a calmer, more productive home office....

How to Choose an Office Chair That Supports Long Working Hours

How to Choose an Office Chair That Supports Long Working Hours

An office chair is the piece of furniture you spend the most time using during a working day, yet it is often chosen on look alone. For long hours at the desk, comfort comes from quieter details such as adjustable height, supportive lumbar shape, breathable upholstery and the way the chair pairs with your desk height. A poorly fitted chair shows itself in the first hour and quietly erodes focus over the rest of the day. The right one fades into the background and lets the working day flow. This guide moves through the practical points to look at before buying, from posture and seat depth to materials and the case for trying a chair before committing. It is written for British home workers spending real hours at the desk, not for showrooms or short demonstrations, so each tip leans on everyday use rather than features designed for a brochure....