Interiors

8 Home-Styling Secrets To Elevate Your Space, According To The Experts

An immaculately renovated mid-century home (The Modern House)

Have you ever wondered why some homes have an undeniable allure? We asked boutique real-estate agents specializing in extraordinary British properties to reveal the subtle yet impactful choices – from layered textures to unexpected flourishes – that will make your home irresistible. By ROXY KAVOUSI-WALKER

Lifestyle

Plenty of homes are beautiful. Far fewer are unforgettable – the kind that stop you mid-stride and linger in your mind long after you’ve left. Pinpointing why isn’t easy; it could be part ambiance, part meticulous detail, part magic. So, we asked a handful of leading boutique real-estate agents, seasoned in marketing some of the UK’s most desirable residences, to share the common threads that give these homes their distinctive appeal – and how you can weave them into your own.

Loft-style living in north London, where an open-plan living and dining space sits beneath vaulted ceilings (Aucoot)

It’s about how you curate, not what you curate

A simple philosophy, but one that can’t be rushed. “It’s those little decisions that add up to a certain atmosphere in a thoughtfully designed home,” says Dan O’Brien, owner and director of specialist London real-estate agency “It takes time to hone and embrace your style to create a unique home,” concurs Louise Willocks, managing director of design-led British real-estate agencies and A home should “reflect the people who live there and the things they love – whether that’s what they’ve been given or collected over many years”.

The owners of this 19th-century townhouse in Kent have integrated a confident yet carefully curated palette of vibrant hues and contemporary lighting into a traditional setting (The Modern House)

Consider a multi-sensory approach

“Drawing on all the senses is something we speak about a lot. It may not be obvious, but scent can play a huge factor in how a home feels,” says Chloe Bliss, senior head of UK at The Modern House and Inigo. “Texture plays a surprisingly important role,” says O’Brien. “From worn timber floors to handmade tiles – it’s often these tactile elements that ground a home and give it soul. Then there’s light: not just in terms of brightness, but quality. Natural light that moves softly through a room, or a well-placed wall light in the evening. Ultimately, it’s the balance between contrast and cohesion that creates warmth and intrigue.”

Use texture and color to add character in even the smallest of spaces (The Modern House)
This home’s charming color scheme and wooden decor highlight its unique seaside location (Inigo)

Let the space lead

Styling a home should “highlight its strengths without overshadowing its natural character,” says O’Brien. “Is it a small room? Lean into it and paint it dark. Is it lofty? Try a lighter, more natural colour,” suggests Bliss. Scale matters, too: “A room can feel instantly more comfortable when furniture is properly proportioned,” adds O’Brien. Willocks offers some sage words of advice: “If something is too big for your space do not buy it – even if you’ve fallen in love.”

Style with moderation

There is such a thing as overly curating or staging: “Artfully arranged display books or overdoing it with plumped-up cushions can disrupt the overall feel and flow – even in the most beautiful homes,” says Georgia Grunfield, of The Modern House and Inigo. “Some of our most special homes have layers of family history – a healthy amount of chaos and character is good.”

Distinctively elegant wallpapers, fittings and paint colors ornament this handsome Victorian home in south-east London (Inigo)

Champion details

“Attention to detail makes a space feel intentional and gives it character,” comments O’Brien. “This is especially true of joinery and carpentry; they have a huge bearing on the overall effect of a room.” This can be done easily via color – and you don’t need to be too bold with it: “Painted skirting boards or coving can add interest without committing to a full scheme, while ceilings in a subtly contrasting shade introduce depth.”

Don’t be afraid to juxtapose modern artworks with your home’s original features (Aucoot)

Vintage pieces are your ace card

“I know it’s a cliché, but mixing old and new really is the secret,” muses Willocks. O’Brien shares a similar sentiment: “The most effective spaces are those that reveal a sense of life, with pieces that have clearly been chosen over time, not all at once. We often find that mixing in vintage furniture or textiles gives texture and a sense of place to interiors.”

Whatever your style, it’s important to personalize your space with meaningful pieces that add “a sense of life” (Inigo/The Modern House)

Avoid these common pitfalls

“Over-lighting is a common one, especially with downlights,” comments O’Brien. “Too many, and you end up with a flat, clinical feel. It’s better to layer lighting: some low-level, some ambient, some directional.” If you have an open-plan space such as a kitchen-living room, an issue that can crop up is where the areas don’t quite speak to each other. O’Brien suggests the following: “It helps to have some visual connection, maybe in the form of colour, material or a shared detail, so that each zone feels distinct, but still part of the same story.”

This north-London home adds personality and charm to a blank canvas with playful pieces, vibrant color and floral displays (Aucoot)

Introduce playful elements

“There’s a lightness of touch to the way historical elements and contemporary design meet, but also a sense of storytelling that feels both personal and imaginative,” considers O’Brien. “One of the most memorable homes we’ve seen recently – a Victorian townhouse on De Beauvoir Square [in north London] redesigned by Irenie Studio – did this beautifully with a dining table made from salvaged doors and a reclaimed emerald-green ‘cupboard of curiosity’ hidden at the end of the garden. It’s a reminder that joy and whimsy have a place in even the most elegant interiors. Small, unexpected gestures like this invite you to look twice – and they linger in the memory.”