Furniture in Fashion Blog
Furniture in Fashion Blog
Furniture in Fashion Blog
Open shelving has become a quiet favourite in many UK living rooms. It draws the eye upward, breaks up large stretches of wall, and gives you somewhere to display the pieces you genuinely enjoy looking at. Done well, it adds personality without crowding a room. Done poorly, it can quickly feel cluttered or staged. The following eight ideas focus on practical ways to style shelves so they earn their place in a busy household.
1. Begin with a clear plan
Before you reach for a single book or vase, take a few minutes to look at your shelves with fresh eyes. Group items in piles on the floor and sort them by colour, size, and material. Most living rooms benefit from a mix of horizontal stacks, vertical objects, and a little negative space. If you find yourself with mostly small items, consider rotating a few back into a cupboard until the next refresh.
2. Layer books in two directions
Books are still one of the most flexible styling tools. Standing some upright and stacking others horizontally creates rhythm across a shelf. Use the horizontal stacks as plinths for ceramics, framed photographs, or small ornaments. If your collection is colourful, try arranging spines tonally rather than alphabetically for a calmer overall look.
3. Add weight with sculptural pieces
A shelf full of slim objects tends to feel restless. Anchor each level with one heavier piece, such as a stone bowl, a chunky candle, or a substantial vase. Browse our vases collection for shapes that hold their own without dominating the display, and look for vessels with weight at the base so they read as grounded rather than floating.
4. Bring in greenery
A trailing plant softens the strict lines of a bookcase or floating shelf. Trailing ivy, pothos, or string of hearts works well on higher shelves where the foliage can fall naturally. If your room has limited daylight, dried grasses in a tall vessel give a similar effect without the upkeep.
5. Use art on the shelves themselves
Leaning a small framed print against the back of a shelf adds depth and breaks the predictable line of spines and objects. Choose pieces in tones that already exist in your sofa, rug, or curtains so the display feels considered rather than random. Larger shelving units can also act as a quiet gallery for prints you rotate through the seasons.
6. Mix materials thoughtfully
Wood, ceramic, glass, brass, and matte black metal all sit well together when used in moderation. Try to repeat each material at least twice across the shelving so nothing feels isolated. Our shelving units and storage range offers frames in different finishes, which gives you a strong starting point for the rest of the styling.
7. Leave room to breathe
One of the simplest rules is also the easiest to forget. Empty space is part of the design. Aim to leave roughly a third of each shelf clear, so the objects you have chosen actually stand out. If a shelf feels too full, remove the smallest items first and see how the arrangement settles.
8. Light the display
Shelves often sit in the shadow of taller furniture, which can make even thoughtful styling fall flat. A slim picture light above the unit, a small lamp on a middle shelf, or a few warm bulbs in nearby table lamps can lift the entire arrangement after dark. Warm white tones tend to flatter wood and ceramics best.
How shelving fits the wider room
Open shelves rarely stand alone. They sit beside sofas, beneath televisions, and across from windows. Treat them as part of the whole composition rather than a standalone task. If you are building a scheme from scratch, our wider living room furniture collection at Furniture in Fashion includes coordinating pieces that help shelving feel connected to the rest of the room.
Frequently asked questions
How often should I restyle my open shelves?
A small refresh every few months keeps the display from blending into the background. A full restyle once or twice a year is usually enough for most UK households.
What is a good ratio of books to objects?
Many homes find that roughly sixty percent books and forty percent objects feels balanced. Adjust to suit how much you actually read and how often you swap titles.
Are floating shelves strong enough for heavy items?
Floating shelves vary widely. Always check the weight rating and fix them into solid wall studs or use the correct fixings for plasterboard before loading them up.
How do I stop shelves looking cluttered?
Edit first, style second. Remove anything that does not earn its space, and keep a third of each shelf clear so the eye has somewhere to settle.

No Comments
Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.