
Living Room Furniture
Create a living room that feels welcoming,
Handcrafted Living Room Furniture for Real Life at Home
The living room is one of the hardest-working spaces in the home. It is where people gather, relax, watch movies, welcome guests, and settle into everyday routines. At Graber’s Handcrafted Furniture, our living room furniture is built to support all of that with lasting craftsmanship, comfortable seating, practical storage, and timeless style.
Explore living room furniture in a wide range of styles, wood types, and finishes, with custom options that help every room feel more personal.
Our Featured Living Room Furniture Collections
Hannah Occasional Collection
This Collection Includes:
- Hannah Media Stand
- Hannah Sofa Table
- Hannah Coffee Table
- Hannah End Table
Bow Madison Living Room Collection
This Collection Includes:
- Sofa Table
- Coffee Table
- End Table
- Chairside Table
Remington Collection
This Collection Includes:
- Remington Power Sofa Recliner
- Remington Power Loveseat Recliner
- Remington Power Chair Recliner
Shop Living Room Furniture by Category
Why Families Choose Graber’s for Living Room Furniture
Living room furniture usually has to do a little bit of everything. It needs to be comfortable enough for daily use, practical enough for the way the room functions, and attractive enough to tie the whole space together. That is why helpful guidance matters so much when choosing the mix of seating, tables, media pieces, and accents that shape the room.
Graber’s gives customers the chance to compare options more confidently and think through how each piece will actually live in the home. This section is a good place to reinforce that shoppers are not just finding furniture. They are finding furniture that feels lasting, useful, and well chosen for the way they live.
Seating is where that experience begins
Seating Pieces That Make the Living Room More Comfortable
Seating usually sets the tone for the living room more than any other furniture category. It shapes comfort, conversation, traffic flow, and the overall feel of the space. This section is a good place to highlight how sofas, loveseats, recliners, and accent chairs work together to create a room that feels both inviting and practical.


Sofas
Sofas usually serve as the main seating anchor in the room. They help define the gathering area and are often the first piece people build around when planning a living room layout.
Love Seats
Love seats are a smart option for smaller rooms, secondary seating, or spaces that need a little more flexibility. They can work beautifully on their own or as part of a larger seating arrangement.
Accent Chairs
Accent chairs help round out the seating area while bringing in personality, texture, and visual balance. They are especially useful when you want the room to feel more layered and complete.
Ottomans
Ottomans can add comfort, flexibility, and an easy place to kick up your feet or soften the room visually. They often work especially well in rooms that want comfort without adding another large seating piece.
Featured Love Seats
help simplify the search
Living Room Collections Designed to Work Together
Shopping by collection can make it much easier to build a living room that feels balanced from the beginning. It helps customers picture how seating, tables, and accent pieces work together while still allowing room for upholstery, wood tone, and styling choices that make the room feel personal.

A Practical Guide to Accent Chair Styles
Accent seating does more than fill an empty corner. It can create a reading space, balance a sofa visually, add motion-based comfort, or make the room feel more personal and complete. This section helps explain how the main accent seating types differ so shoppers can choose pieces that truly support the way they relax.
Arm Chairs
Arm chairs are one of the most versatile accent seating choices. They work well in conversation areas, reading corners, or as supporting pieces around a sofa. They are a good fit when you want comfort and flexibility without committing to a more specialized seating style.
Rockers
Rockers add gentle motion and a more classic kind of comfort. They often feel especially at home in warm, relaxed living spaces where the goal is to create a welcoming and familiar atmosphere.
Gliders
Gliders offer motion too, but with a smoother and often more contained feel. They are a nice option for rooms where comfort matters and where people want a chair that feels easy to settle into without the larger footprint or look of a recliner.
Find the Right Table
Compare Coffee Tables, End Tables, and Sofa Tables
Occasional tables may not be the largest pieces in the room, but they often shape how the space functions day to day. Some are meant to anchor the seating area, while others support lighting, drinks, décor, or convenient storage right where you need it. This section helps explain how each type works so shoppers can choose the pieces that fit their room more naturally.


Coffee Tables
Coffee tables usually serve as the center surface within a seating area. They help anchor the room visually while also giving people a practical place for drinks, books, décor, and everyday items. They are often the piece that ties the seating arrangement together.
End Tables
End tables are ideal for adding useful surface space beside sofas and chairs. They help support lamps, drinks, remotes, and smaller decorative pieces without taking over the room. They are one of the simplest ways to make a living room feel more finished and more functional.
Sofa Tables
Sofa tables are a smart option when you want to use the space behind a sofa more intentionally. They can add display space, lighting support, or a practical surface without interrupting the main seating area. They work especially well in open layouts or rooms where furniture floats away from the walls.
Sofa Servers
Sofa servers bring a smaller, more targeted kind of convenience into the room. They are useful when you want an easy spot for a drink, snack, or device close to the seating. They are a practical choice for homes that want function without adding a larger table footprint.
Featured Coffee Tables
Featured End Tables

Supporting Pieces That Help the Living Room Feel Complete
Not every important living room piece is a seat or a table. Media furniture, entryway pieces, mantels, and accent décor often shape how organized, welcoming, and complete the room feels. This section gives you room to show how those supporting pieces help the space function better while also adding warmth and character.
TV Stands
TV stands help anchor the media area while giving electronics and accessories a more organized home. They are often one of the main visual pieces in the room, especially in family rooms and casual gathering spaces.
Entryway Pieces
Entryway furniture helps transition the living room into the rest of the home. Pieces like hall seats, hallway benches, coat racks, and clothes trees can make the space feel more welcoming and more functional from the moment someone walks in.
Decor and Accent Pieces
Clocks, shelves, lighting, plant stands, and other décor pieces help personalize the room. They are often what make the space feel lived in, layered, and more complete.

When Standard Living Room Furniture Is Not Quite the Right Fit
Living rooms rarely work exactly the same from one home to the next. Some need a larger sofa to anchor an open layout. Others need a loveseat that keeps the room from feeling crowded, a TV stand scaled to the wall, or occasional tables that fit more comfortably around the seating area. That is where custom living room furniture becomes especially helpful.
Instead of trying to force standard pieces into every layout, customization gives you more control over the details that shape comfort and flow. That can mean choosing the right upholstery, selecting wood tones that fit the rest of the room, or finding a piece with the dimensions and features that make everyday use feel easier.
- Sofa and loveseat sizing
- Manual recline options
- Accent chair style selection
- Ottoman pairing and flexibility
- TV stand and media piece dimensions
- Coffee table and end table scale
- Wood species selection
- Finish and stain customization
- Upholstery and fabric choices
- Entryway and accent piece coordination
Compare Living Room Seating Styles at a Glance
Living room seating works best when it reflects the way the room is actually used. Some spaces need larger group seating, while others need flexible accent pieces or one especially comfortable place to unwind. This chart helps simplify those choices by comparing the main seating types side by side.
| Seating Type | Best For | Comfort Style | Footprint | Works Best In | Why People Choose It |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sofa | Main seating anchor | Everyday shared seating | Larger footprint | Primary living rooms and family rooms | Creates the foundation for the seating area |
| Love Seat | Smaller-scale shared seating | Comfortable but compact | Moderate footprint | Smaller living rooms or secondary seating areas | Adds seating without crowding the room |
| Arm Chair | Flexible accent seating | Versatile everyday comfort | Smaller footprint | Conversation areas, corners, and layered seating plans | Easy to move into many layouts |
| Recliner | Personal comfort and relaxation | Deep comfort with motion | Moderate footprint | Family rooms and comfort-focused spaces | Great for movie nights and everyday lounging |
| Glider or Rocker | Gentle motion seating | Relaxed comfort with movement | Moderate footprint | Warm, casual living spaces | Adds a softer, more relaxed seating experience |
| Ottoman | Flexible comfort support | Footrest or extra perch | Small to moderate footprint | Most seating layouts | Adds comfort and versatility without a full chair footprint |
Frequently Asked Questions
Helpful Answers for Living Room Furniture Shoppers
What living room furniture pieces should I start with first?
Most shoppers begin with the main seating piece, usually a sofa or loveseat, and then build around it with tables, accent seating, and any media or storage pieces the room needs most.
How do I choose between a sofa and a loveseat?
A sofa is usually the better option when you need the main seating anchor for the room. A loveseat works well when the space is smaller, when you want secondary seating, or when you are pairing it with other upholstered pieces.
What occasional tables do I really need in a living room?
That depends on how you use the space. A coffee table is often the starting point, while end tables, sofa tables, and sofa servers are added based on layout, lighting, storage, and convenience needs.
What is the difference between a TV console, entertainment center, and corner TV stand?
A TV console usually offers a more straightforward media setup with lower-profile storage. An entertainment center tends to provide a larger, more built-in feel. A corner TV stand is especially useful when you want to make better use of a corner without sacrificing function.
How do I make a living room feel coordinated without overmatching everything?
A good approach is to keep the wood tone or overall style direction connected, then let the room vary through seating shapes, upholstery, décor, and accent pieces. That helps the space feel intentional without feeling too uniform.
Can living room furniture be customized?
Yes. Depending on the piece, custom options may include size, wood species, finish, upholstery, and other details that help the furniture fit your room and the way you live.







































