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Homes & Gardens
Homes & Gardens
Jennifer Ebert

Anne Hathaway's living room features the best furniture arrangement we've ever seen – experts love the 'conversational seating'

Anne Hathaway.

When you have people over for festive gatherings, you notice when you’ve got the seating arrangements right. Seating plans are very important – and not just at a dinner table. I like to think of seating plans for the living room – what I call ‘conversational seating’. 

Actress Anne Hathaway and her husband, jewelry designer Adam Shulman have perfected the living room seating arrangement in their chalet-style residence in California. But it all starts with knowing how to maximize your floorplan.

Figuring out your floor plan is vital to ensure that your living room works from a practical and aesthetic standpoint. Start by working out the central point of the room; this will guide you as to where to place large pieces of furniture, such as sofas and chairs.

Design icon, Nina Campbell is a champion of what she likes to call 'conversational seating.'

'For example, when designing a living room with a traditional fireplace, this will be a central point,' she says. 'You can then either have the sofa to one side with a couple of chairs opposite. Alternatively, you can position the couch so it’s facing the fireplace and chairs on either side.' 

It’s always good to throw off the symmetry of the room and add an extra dimension with mismatched furniture, color schemes, shapes, and styles to make the space feel more relaxed and encourage conversation.

But there is so much more to choosing a living room sofa or chair than just their appearance. The number of chairs you set out is an important consideration, too. Odd numbers are good for seating plans in general because they allow for some rotation of guests. 

The interior designer Elsie de Wolfe wrote in 1913 that you must never place a chair on its own in a room; she was very shy herself and noted that it is always the shy person who arrives first, sits on the lone chair, and then is often rooted there for the whole party. But two next to each other does not always work, either. I find that two people sitting side by side do not always speak to each other, so having an occasional chair pulled in at a diagonal can create conversational triangles, similar to the seating placement in Anne Hathaway's home above.


Another way to arrange your seating is to place them within arm's reach of a side or coffee table. Can you imagine having to get up every time you – or, your guest – wanted to reach the remote or sip their drink?

Finally, you should never skimp on the most important piece of furniture in your living room; the sofa. 'The sofas and bigger pieces of furniture should be covered in a tough, strong, and relatively plain fabric, so you don’t tire of it; they are expensive to re-cover. You can jazz them up with cushions and throws,' says Nina Campbell.

Shop the living room seating edit

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