Reading Chairs for the Living Room
A reading chair is the most used seat in any living room — and the most exacting to choose. Unlike a conversational accent chair, a reading chair must deliver back support, seat depth, and armrest height simultaneously across extended sessions. Look for a seat depth of at least 20 inches, a back tall enough to support the upper back, and padded arms at natural elbow height. The best living room reading chair silhouettes are wingback chairs for defined lateral support, club chairs for deep cushioning, and lounge chairs with a slight recline. Each provides the structural support that a purely decorative accent chair does not. Mobilart's design consultation includes reading chair sizing and placement for your specific room layout.
Accent Chairs and Ottomans for the Living Room
An accent chair and ottoman combination creates a complete relaxation zone in a living room corner — chair and footrest functioning as a self-contained lounging unit without requiring additional furniture. Two configuration approaches work well: a matching set with chair and ottoman upholstered in the same fabric for visual cohesion, or a mixed pairing with a contrasting ottoman for deliberate variety. The ottoman also serves as flexible additional seating when guests arrive — a practical consideration for Montreal condos where the living room must handle multiple uses. For sizing, choose an accent chair with an ottoman at a height within one to two inches of the seat for comfortable leg extension.
Wingback, Oversized, and Small Accent Chairs for Every Living Room
Wingback Accent Chairs
A wingback accent chair is the most structurally commanding living room silhouette — the high back and defined side panels provide head and neck support for reading while anchoring the room visually. Available in fabric, velvet, and leather across traditional, transitional, and contemporary interiors.
Oversized Accent Chairs
An oversized accent chair delivers generous proportions — wider seat, deeper cushioning, and a larger visual footprint — making it the statement piece for open-plan rooms where the chair is a primary visual element alongside the sofa.
Small Accent Chairs for Compact Living Rooms
Under 30 inches wide, a small accent chair for a living room suits condos and apartments where floor space is the primary constraint. Armless designs and chairs with exposed legs minimise visual weight in tight layouts.
How to Place an Accent Chair in Your Living Room
Placement is the decision most buyers make last — and the one that determines whether the chair reads as part of the room or as an afterthought.
The corner position: place an accent chair in a living room corner with 18 inches of clearance on both sides, angled 15 to 20 degrees toward the sofa. A chair facing flat against the wall looks unused; angling it activates the room and draws it into the conversation zone.
Flanking the sofa: two matching accent chairs positioned symmetrically across from the sofa create a formal conversation arrangement — allow 36 inches between chair and sofa for comfortable leg clearance and visual breathing room.
The reading nook setup is the most complete living room chair composition: chair, floor lamp at outside shoulder height, small side table at armrest height, and an area rug to anchor the grouping. Each element reinforces the others; the result is a visually complete zone within the larger room.
What to avoid: positioning the chair flat against a wall, placing it directly under an unshaded window, and choosing a scale that competes with the sofa rather than complements it.
Accent Chairs for Living Rooms in Montreal — Design Guidance for Condos and Open Spaces
Montreal living rooms come in two dominant configurations, and each calls for a different accent chair strategy.
In open-concept condos, the living area flows into the dining zone and kitchen — the accent chair is visible simultaneously from multiple vantage points and must read well from every angle. A swivel accent chair handles this challenge better than any static silhouette, covering multiple sightlines and orientations without needing to be repositioned. A contemporary accent chair in boucle or velvet works especially well in this context — strong enough to carry visual weight across an open space without requiring pattern or oversized scale.
In older pre-war Montreal apartments, the living room is typically a defined, separate space with lower ceilings and more contained proportions. Scale discipline matters here: keep the chair under 30 inches wide to maintain proportion within the room's fixed dimensions. Armless designs and chairs with exposed legs preserve floor visibility and prevent the room from feeling overcrowded.
For both configurations, Mobilart's design consultation includes a floor plan review — confirming proportions and placement before purchase and eliminating the risk of a chair that reads correctly in the showroom but sits incorrectly in the room. White-glove delivery is included for all orders within Greater Montreal.
