How to Style a Sectional Sofa: The Complete Guide to Corner Sofa Decorating
A sectional or corner sofa is one of the most generous and welcoming pieces of furniture you can buy — it offers abundant seating, naturally defines a seating zone in a room, and creates an instant sense of comfort and hospitality. But its very generosity can also make it challenging to style: too many cushions and it looks cluttered; too few and it looks bare; the wrong rug and the proportions go awry; the wrong placement and the whole room feels awkward. This guide covers everything you need to know about styling a sectional sofa beautifully.
Placement: The First and Most Important Decision
The placement of a sectional sofa shapes the entire room. The most common mistake is pushing the sofa into a corner — while this might seem space-efficient, it actually makes the room feel more cramped and reduces the sofa's visual impact. In most living rooms, a sectional works best when the longer section runs along the main wall and the shorter section extends into the room, creating a clear seating zone that faces a focal point like a fireplace, television, or large window. Leave a comfortable walking corridor around the sofa — at least 60-90cm — so the room does not feel blocked.
Merlot Corner Sofa — from EUR 1,290
The Merlot corner sofa's L-shaped form creates a natural seating zone — its generous proportions call for a large area rug to anchor the arrangement and a carefully considered mix of cushions to complete the look without overwhelming it.
Asti Corner Sofa — from EUR 1,190
The Asti's elegant proportions allow it to fill a large living room without dominating it — styled with a large area rug, a low coffee table, and a restrained cushion arrangement, it creates a beautifully balanced seating zone.
The Right Rug: Size and Placement
A rug is essential for anchoring a sectional sofa. The rug must be large enough to sit under the full footprint of the sofa — at minimum, the front legs of all sections should sit on the rug, with the coffee table also within the rug boundary. For very large sectionals, an oversized rug — 3x4m or larger — is usually required. Getting the rug too small is the most common styling mistake with sectionals: a small rug makes the large sofa look visually unmoored and the room feel awkward.
Cushion Styling: The Rule of Odd Numbers
Cushions on a sectional should be styled in odd-numbered groupings — one large, one medium, one small — that create a sense of comfortable abundance without appearing rigid or over-decorated. The cushion arrangement should follow the arc of the sofa — starting with the largest at the corner and decreasing in number and size toward the ends. A good rule of thumb is to use no more than 5-7 cushions on a 3-seater-plus-longchair sectional. Vary the sizes, textures, and patterns of cushions for visual interest — one plain linen, one textured boucle, one patterned or embroidered cushion creates a natural, collected feeling.
Coffee Table and Side Tables
The coffee table for a sectional sofa needs to be proportionally generous — a small table looks lost in front of a large L-shaped sofa. Ideally, the coffee table should extend along most of the length of the sofa's facing side, positioned 35-45cm from the edge of the sofa to allow comfortable reach without being a stumbling block. Round and oval tables are excellent choices for sectionals — their curved form softens the angular L-shape of the sofa and improves traffic flow around the seating area. A set of nested coffee tables can be separated for practical use and brought together for the complete look.









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