Decorating: How to Style End Tables

By Patrick Wilson

  A couple of weeks ago I asked a bunch of yall on Instagram and in the Blesser House Decorating Group what YOU needed help with and wanted to see here on the blog this year.

  • 1. Less is more

  • 2. Consider what items you usually need within reach.

  • 3. Incorporate an item from nature.

  • 4. Use books to create height.

  • 5. Create a “visual triangle”.

  •   And I got a huge response about how to simplify decorating.

      Because it definitely isnt simple if its not one of those things that comes to you naturally. (I get stuck a lot too, really.)

      So Im breaking down the steps to make each little part of decorating your home as easy as it can possibly be and hopefully take out the guesswork for you.

      Every week or two, I plan to focus on one area of the home and span it out into an entire series. Im SO excited, and I hope it helps! Because I sorta geek out about this stuff.

      Since I did a little living room winter refresh the other day, I thought Id break down how to style end tables because they seem like the perfect starting point.

      Because…

      How do you make end tables pretty but still functional?

      What is too much or too little?

      How do you make them look put together and not cluttered?

      Im by no means a certified interior designer, but Ive studied every resource I could find for YEARS, so Im just sharing what I know. (And over holiday break, while I was visiting the NC mountains with my mom, I found these end tables that I couldnt wait to decorate anyway so…)

      How to Style End Tables:

      1. Less is more

      When in doubt, use only 3, 4, or 5 items on your end tables maximum.

      (Did you know that 3 is the “magic decorating number”? It creates the best symmetry. Seriously, try that number of items on anything: a mantel, a dresser top, a shelf. It works. Its not a number you have to stick to, but it helps, if youre feeling lost when styling something.)

      That number works for “groupings” as well. In the photo above, the frame sitting on top of the book stack counts as one grouping.

      2. Consider what items you usually need within reach.

      I usually need just a set of coasters and a table lamp as my essentials, and then the other pieces can be just pretty decor that dont have to necessarily serve a functional purpose.

      3. Incorporate an item from nature.

      I like to include a potted plant or a vase with flowers to add color, texture, and “life” to what could otherwise be a flat looking vignette.

      4. Use books to create height.

      If you have two items on your table that are exactly the same height, raise one up so that they are staggered.

      5. Create a “visual triangle”.

      Whenever styling shelves or tabletops or any sort of vignette, place items into a triangle shape. The “visual triangle” is a stylists best secret.