Tactile design is not a fashion. It is a return to something many of us already understood instinctively. The way a surface feels under our hand or how light moves across it shapes our experience of a room far more than we tend to notice. When chosen with care, surfaces give an interior its character before furniture, art or accessories enter the picture.
In our work with British homeowners, we are often asked which materials hold up well, look considered and bring a sense of warmth without trying too hard. The honest answer is that several surfaces have become quiet favourites, each for slightly different reasons.
Solid wood is the surface most often chosen for tactile design and with good reason. Oak, ash, walnut and pine each offer their own grain, weight and tone. Oak ages beautifully and softens over time. Walnut brings depth and warmth to even a small space. The grain reads differently in morning and evening light, which is part of what makes timber so engaging.
Our customers regularly look to our wooden coffee tables when they want a piece that does the heavy lifting in a room. A timber surface can stand alone or anchor softer fabrics around it.
Stone surfaces have become much more accessible in recent years and now appear in homes well beyond grand kitchens. A marble topped console table or a stone slab coffee table introduces a calm, weighted quality that very few other materials can match. The veining in marble gives the eye something to follow without competing with the rest of the room.
For UK homes, where rooms can feel busy with pattern and clutter, a single stone surface often does the work of several decorative pieces. Pieces from our marble and stone coffee tables range tend to suit both period and contemporary interiors.
Upholstery is another surface that defines tactile design. Velvet has remained popular because it changes with the light, deepening at dusk and lifting in the morning. Bouclé, with its tight loops, brings a quieter softness that suits softer schemes. Together they cover the two ends of the spectrum, glow and quiet.
Velvet works particularly well on dining chairs, where a hand often brushes against the back. Browse our velvet dining chairs to see how a single fabric choice can lift an everyday space.
Leather is the surface that improves the longer it lives in a home. New leather feels firm and crisp. Over time it softens, develops marks and tells the story of the people who use it. For sofas in particular, this is one of leather's quiet strengths. A well made leather piece becomes more comfortable each year. Our leather sofas collection includes pieces designed for exactly this kind of long use.
Leather sits well next to wood and stone, which is part of why it remains a popular choice in homes that mix several tactile surfaces.
Tactile design is not only about soft and warm. Smooth, reflective surfaces such as glass and high gloss play an important role in giving the eye a place to rest. A glass topped table next to a textured rug, or a high gloss sideboard against a rough plaster wall, creates the contrast that makes both surfaces feel more interesting.
The mistake is to fill a room with these finishes. They are most effective in measured doses, used to lighten and brighten rather than dominate.
Rattan, jute, seagrass and wool bring a different kind of tactility into a room. They feel handmade even when they are not. A woven basket beside a fireplace, a jute rug under a dining table or a rattan headboard in a bedroom each give a quiet nod to craft. These materials soften interiors that might otherwise feel too clean or too modern.
The aim is not to use every material at once. A successful tactile scheme tends to rely on three or four core surfaces, repeated through a room in different forms. A wood and stone pairing works well in dining rooms. Velvet and leather sit comfortably together in living rooms. Glass and timber suit hallways. Once the core mix is set, smaller items such as cushions, vases and lamps can be added without unbalancing the room.
Solid timber and good quality leather both age well and tend to look better with use. Both are practical choices for busy households.
Yes. A small marble topped side table or a stone tray on a sideboard introduces the same calm quality as a larger piece, without taking up extra space.
Choose a single velvet piece rather than a full set, and pair it with quieter materials such as oak or linen. Velvet looks fresh when it sits among contrasts.
Glass works particularly well alongside rough finishes. The contrast highlights both materials and prevents either from feeling out of place.
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