Choosing the Right Living Room Mirror
How to size a living room mirror
A living room mirror placed above a console table or sideboard should span approximately two-thirds of the furniture's width to maintain visual balance. For a sofa wall, a large format mirror spanning 60 to 80 percent of the sofa's width reads as an intentional design statement rather than a decorative afterthought.
Large wall mirrors in Canada are most frequently positioned above a fireplace surround or on a feature wall opposite a window, both placements that maximise the light-amplifying and depth-creating effect of a reflective surface. In rooms with 9-foot or higher ceilings, a vertically oriented large format mirror reinforces the room's sense of scale. In standard 8-foot ceiling rooms, a horizontal or square format prevents the mirror from appearing to compress the ceiling line.
Choosing a frame style for the living room
Gold and antique brass frames suit warm, layered interiors with rich wood tones, velvet upholstery, or organic materials, and read particularly well in transitional and contemporary-classic living rooms. Black and dark metal frames work best in rooms with a strong contrast palette, adding graphic clarity without competing with other design elements.
Wood-framed and natural finish mirrors in oak, walnut, or textured wood suit organic and Scandinavian-influenced interiors where the room's material palette is predominantly warm and natural. Frameless and bevelled mirrors are the most spatially neutral option, adding reflective depth without introducing a new finish or colour into the room's existing palette.
Mirrors for the Dining Room and Beyond
A mirror in the dining room performs a double function: it reflects candlelight and overhead lighting to create warmth during evening entertaining, and it makes the room appear more spacious and open during daytime use. The most common dining room placement is above a sideboard or buffet, where the same two-thirds width rule applies. A vertically oriented mirror above a horizontal storage piece adds architectural height to the overall composition.
Accent mirrors from the Bonneville, Downing, and Elsabeth range are well suited to dining rooms and entryways where a statement piece is required but the available wall area is more contained than a principal living room feature wall. The Mobilart sideboards and buffets collection offers a range of dining room storage pieces suited to these pairings.
Explore the full collection of decorative wall mirrors in Mobilart’s 25,000 sq ft showroom at 8260 Devonshire, Mont-Royal, or book a complimentary design consultation in person or virtually to find the right piece for your space.
