Designing a dining room sounds simple. A table, some chairs, perhaps a sideboard and a pendant overhead. Yet the same handful of mistakes repeat across UK homes, and they are the difference between a room that feels considered and one that feels almost right but never quite settles. At Furniture in Fashion, we see the patterns clearly because we speak to thousands of customers every year. Here are the design mistakes that come up most often, and how to sidestep each one.
The classic mistake is buying for occasions, not for everyday life. A six seater in a room that fits four comfortably will dominate every weekday meal. A four seater in a room that hosts six regularly will leave guests squashed elbow to elbow. Measure the room, leave 90cm of clearance on every side, and choose accordingly. If your numbers shift, an extending dining table is the obvious answer. It compresses for daily use and opens out when needed.
Beautiful chairs that are torture to sit in for an hour are the second most common mistake. Test chairs the way you actually use them, which is sitting still for at least 45 minutes, and pay particular attention to the lower back and the seat pan. Padded seats, supportive backs and the right seat height for your table all matter more than the most fashionable shape. Our fabric dining chairs strike a sensible balance between modern style and the comfort that real meals demand.
A small rug floating in the middle of the floor with chair legs half on, half off, is one of the more jarring sights in interior design. The rule is straightforward. The rug should extend at least 60cm beyond the table on every side, so the back chair legs stay on it when pulled out. Anything smaller looks like a placemat in a room that needs a blanket.
A pendant hanging too high looks lost above the table. One hanging too low blocks sightlines and turns conversation into a game of peering around the shade. The sweet spot is 75cm to 90cm above the table surface. The bottom of the pendant should be visible from a seated position but not in the way of eye contact. Get this single detail right and the whole room lifts.
Without somewhere for serving dishes, candles, table linen and the daily clutter, the table itself becomes the dumping ground. Clearing it before every meal becomes exhausting. A good sideboard from our sideboard collection takes the pressure off in minutes, and the styles range from contemporary high gloss through to classic wood.
Buying a table, six chairs, a sideboard and a console in identical wood and finish is the fastest way to make a dining room feel like a showroom from a different decade. Modern dining rooms mix materials, textures and tones. A wooden table with metal framed chairs and a glass fronted sideboard feels collected, layered and personal. Matching too tightly removes the personality the room is supposed to carry.
This was sound advice in tiny student flats. In a real dining room it makes the space feel like a waiting room. A table sits best slightly away from the wall, with the sideboard on a different wall rather than directly behind. Breathing space between pieces is what makes a room feel designed instead of packed.
Bare walls above and around the table make the whole space feel unfinished. A large mirror on the wall opposite the window doubles the daylight. A single oversized piece of art over the sideboard adds personality. Even a row of identical sconces or wall plates can transform a forgotten wall.
The biggest mistake of all is treating the dining room as a room you only use at Christmas. The more you use it, the more reasons you find to make it lovely. Eat there on Tuesday, work there on Thursday, do homework there on Sunday afternoon. Browse our dining table and chairs sets and choose pieces designed for daily life rather than display. Avoid the common mistakes and the dining room earns its place again.
Sit at the table. The bottom of the shade should sit between 75cm and 90cm above the table surface, low enough to feel intimate but high enough that you can see the person opposite without ducking.
Generally around 200cm by 300cm for a standard rectangular six seater, but the rule is the rug must extend 60cm beyond every edge so the back chair legs stay on it.
Yes, especially upholstered carvers at the heads of the table with simpler side chairs along the edges. It adds character and quietly improves comfort for the people who sit there longest.
Because it reads as a single block of one finish rather than a layered collection. Mixing materials and tones is the easiest way to update a matching set without replacing it.
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