If Goldilocks had grown up to be an interior designer, she wouldn’t just be picky about porridge. She’d survey your living room and immediately notice when something feels off — a sofa that reads too heavy, a coffee table that skews too light. The goal, as in the fairy tale, is achieving a “just right”…

If a room in your home — be it the living area, dining room, or bedroom — feels inexplicably flat, the issue might not be paint color or furniture layout. Instead, consider the furniture’s visual weight and how those weights interact with one another. According to TikTok creator and interior designer Hans Lorei, compelling interiors come from contrast. By pairing solid, grounded pieces with lighter, more delicate ones, you create a sense of balance. That tension is what makes a space feel effortless and lived-in, rather than staged or bland. 

Why Visual Weight Matters

Visual weight refers to how heavy a piece looks — not necessarily how many friends you bribed with pizza to help you move it inside. If every element in a room sits on spindly legs, the space can feel fragile or unfinished. But fill that same room with low, blocky silhouettes, and it can appear dense and overwhelming. 

Design-minded folks instinctively mix the two: A solid oak dining table looks more inviting when complemented by cane-backed chairs on tapered legs. A chunky sofa becomes more dynamic when balanced with a leggy side table, a sculptural floor lamp, or a glass-topped coffee table. That contrast creates a design that feels equally energetic and comfortable.

Advertisement

How To Mix Chunky and Light Pieces

Every room can benefit from intentional weight contrast. In a dining room, a delicate dining table can be anchored by a set of chunky chairs, or vice versa. Moving to the bedroom, a solid upholstered or wooden bed frame shines when accented by long-legged nightstands and a bench that reveals the floor underneath. Prefer the opposite look? A four-poster bed reads more grounded when flanked by solid side tables and a weighty bench at the foot. 

Related: The Interior Design Trends Set To Take Over in 2026

Living rooms especially benefit from this mix. Consider pairing a slim-legged sofa with a solid stone coffee table, or offsetting a large sectional with an open-base accent chair. Even decor accents can get in on the action, since light-catching accessories like ceramics and airy baskets can subtly shift the visual balance. 

Advertisement