
Living Room Furniture
Designed for comfort
Custom Living Room Furniture for Virginia Homes
Living room furniture shapes the spaces where people gather, relax, entertain, and settle into everyday life. It is often one of the most used parts of the home, which means the furniture has to do more than look good in the room. It should feel comfortable, fit the layout well, support how the space is used, and hold up beautifully over time.
At Amish Custom Furniture, our living room furniture is built from solid wood and designed to bring together function, comfort, and lasting craftsmanship. Whether you are starting with the main seating, building around a TV wall, adding occasional tables, or finishing the room with accent pieces and décor, this category gives you the flexibility to create a space that feels both inviting and thoughtfully put together.
Our Featured Living Room Furniture Collections
Bay Pointe Occasionals Collection
Bow Madison Living Room Collection
Hannah Occasional Collection
Browse Living Room Furniture Categories
Why Families Choose Amish Living Room Furniture
From TV stands and occasional tables to sofas, recliners, and entryway pieces, the right living room furniture helps the space feel more organized, more comfortable, and more complete. Families often appreciate pieces that support both everyday routines and the kind of welcoming atmosphere that makes the room feel like the heart of the home.
See why families value solid wood quality, practical design, and furniture that feels built for real life.
Which TV Stand Style Fits Your Space Best?
Choosing the Right Media Furniture for Your Living Room
TV furniture often becomes one of the main anchors in the living room, so the style and scale matter. Some homes need a lower-profile piece that keeps the space feeling open, while others need more storage, corner placement, or a fuller entertainment setup. Comparing the main media furniture styles makes it easier to choose the option that fits the wall, the room, and the way the space is actually used.


Corner TV Stands
Corner TV stands are a smart choice for rooms where wall layout or traffic flow makes corner placement more practical. They help make good use of space while still giving the television a dedicated furniture base that feels intentional.
TV Consoles
TV consoles offer a clean, lower-profile option for media storage and screen support. They work especially well in living rooms where the goal is a more streamlined look without giving up practical storage for components, remotes, or everyday essentials.
Entertainment Centers
Entertainment centers are ideal for households that want a more substantial media wall with added storage and display space. They bring stronger visual presence and can help the living room feel more complete when the TV area is meant to serve as a major focal point.
Featured Entertainment Centers
Find Your STyle
Shop Coordinated Living Room Collections
Living room collections make it easier to picture how the room can come together as a whole. Instead of selecting each piece separately, you can explore coordinated styles that help seating, tables, and storage feel more consistent and intentional throughout the space.

Living Room Occasional Tables
Coffee Tables, End Tables, Sofa Tables, and Sofa Servers Compared
Occasional tables help tie the room together and make the seating area more usable in everyday life. Some give the room a central surface for gathering, while others support drinks, lamps, remotes, décor, or the smaller routines that make the space feel comfortable.
Coffee Tables
Coffee tables usually serve as the central table in the seating area and help anchor the room visually. They are useful for everyday surfaces, casual gatherings, and bringing the main seating pieces together in a more complete layout.
End Tables
End tables are a practical fit beside sofas, loveseats, or chairs, where drinks, lamps, or smaller everyday items need to stay within reach. They help add convenience while also balancing the furniture arrangement.
Sofa Tables
Sofa tables work especially well behind a sofa or along an open wall where the room needs a little more structure or display space. They can help define the seating area while also adding surface space without feeling bulky.
Featured Coffee Tables
Living Room Seating Styles
Sofas, Love Seats, Recliners, and Accent Chairs Compared
Seating is often the most personal part of the living room because it affects how the room feels every time it is used. Some households want broader seating for daily gathering, while others want more individualized comfort through recliners, gliders, or accent chairs. Comparing the main seating styles makes it easier to build a room that feels welcoming, balanced, and comfortable in the ways that matter most.


Sofas
Sofas are often the main seating anchor in the living room and are a strong choice for homes that want broader shared seating in one piece. They work especially well in rooms where the goal is everyday lounging, conversation, and a more grounded furniture arrangement.
Love Seats
Love seats offer a slightly smaller seating footprint and work well in living rooms that need shared seating without the scale of a full sofa. They can also pair nicely with other seating pieces when the room needs variety without feeling overcrowded.
Arm Chairs
Arm chairs are a versatile accent seating choice that can help round out the room and create a more flexible conversation layout. They are useful when you want additional seating with a lighter footprint than a sofa or love seat.
Recliners
Recliners are ideal when personal comfort is the priority. They add a more individual kind of seating support and are especially appealing in living rooms where relaxing, reading, or long evenings spent unwinding are a regular part of how the room is used.
Gliders
Gliders bring smooth motion and a slightly more relaxed seating experience. They are a good fit for shoppers who want movement without the more traditional look of a rocker.
Rockers
Rockers add gentle motion with a more classic furniture feel. They work especially well in homes that want comfort with a familiar handcrafted character.
Featured Love Seats
The Accent Pieces That Add Function and Character
Once the main seating and tables are in place, the finishing pieces often determine whether the room feels simply furnished or truly complete. Some add practical support near the entry, some help the room feel warmer and more lived in, and others bring display, organization, or even a pet-friendly function. Looking at these secondary pieces together helps shoppers decide what will add the most usefulness and character to the room.
Clothes Trees
Clothes trees are a simple way to add practical vertical storage near an entry or transitional living space. They help with coats, bags, and other light everyday items while taking up very little floor space.
Hall Seats
Hall seats bring together seating and storage in a way that works especially well near an entryway. They are useful for homes that want a more functional landing space without losing furniture character.
Hallway Benches
Hallway benches offer a lighter, more open seating option for entry areas and transitional spaces. They help create a more welcoming first impression while adding useful everyday seating.

Featured Hall Seats
Featured Hallway Bench

Custom Options
Custom Options That Help the Room Feel Right
Living room furniture works best when it reflects both the room’s layout and how the space is used every day. Some homes need better media storage. Others need the right mix of seating, occasional tables, or accent pieces to make the room feel more balanced and easier to live in. Custom options help solve those needs with furniture that feels more intentional from the start.
That flexibility can matter across the entire room. The scale of a TV console can change how open the wall feels. The right combination of sofa, love seat, and accent seating can make the room more comfortable without crowding it. Table choices, entryway pieces, and finishing accents can all help the space feel more complete and more useful from one end of the room to the other.
- Choose media furniture that fits the wall and room layout better
- Build around sofas, love seats, recliners, and accent seating
- Add occasional tables where convenience matters most
- Mix function with finishing pieces like mantels, décor, and entryway furniture
- Select wood species, finish colors, and coordinating design details
- Create a living room that feels balanced, comfortable, and complete
- Choose furniture that supports both everyday life and entertaining
- Bring warmth and character into the room with handcrafted pieces
A Quick Guide to Living Room Furniture Types
Living rooms often need a balance of seating, media support, surface space, and finishing pieces that help the room feel complete. This chart offers a side-by-side look at common living room furniture types so shoppers can compare what each piece does best and which options make the most sense for their space.
| Furniture Type | Best For | Function Style | Footprint | Works Best In | Why People Choose It |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TV Console | Everyday media storage with a streamlined look | Low-profile media support | Moderate | Living rooms with open wall space | Supports the TV while keeping the room feeling simple and grounded |
| Entertainment Center | Larger media storage and display needs | Full media wall storage | Large | Living rooms where the TV wall is a focal point | Adds storage, display, and stronger furniture presence |
| Corner TV Stand | Space-conscious media placement | Corner media support | Compact to moderate | Rooms with limited wall space or corner layouts | Makes better use of the room while still supporting the TV area |
| Coffee Table | Central surface for the seating area | Main occasional table | Moderate | Sofa-centered living room layouts | Anchors the room and adds everyday convenience |
| End Table | Smaller surface beside seating | Side table support | Small | Beside sofas, love seats, and chairs | Keeps lamps, drinks, and essentials close by |
| Sofa Table | Surface behind seating or along walls | Slim accent table | Narrow footprint | Open layouts and behind-sofa spaces | Helps define the room while adding display space |
| Sofa Server | Compact convenience surface | Close-access accent table | Very small | Relaxed seating areas | Adds function without taking much room |
Living Room Furniture Questions Answered
What living room furniture pieces should I start with first?
Most shoppers begin with the main seating and then build around it with media furniture and occasional tables. After that, accent pieces and décor help complete the room.
What is the difference between a TV console and an entertainment center?
A TV console is usually lower-profile and more streamlined, while an entertainment center offers a larger furniture presence with added storage and display space.
Do I need both a coffee table and end tables?
Not always, but many living rooms benefit from having both. A coffee table anchors the seating area, while end tables add convenience beside the main seating.
Should I choose a sofa, a love seat, or both?
That depends on the room size and how much shared seating you want. A sofa gives broader seating, while a love seat can work well in smaller rooms or as part of a larger seating mix.
Are recliners and gliders too bulky for smaller living rooms?
Not necessarily. It depends on the layout and what kind of comfort matters most. In some rooms, one well-placed comfort chair adds more value than several smaller accent pieces.

Explore Furniture Options
All of our furniture is crafted from premium materials, including solid American hardwoods, durable upholsteries, and poly wood. Customize your furniture with popular options like brown maple, cherry, red oak, and quartersawn white oak. Browse our sample gallery to explore available colors and stain finishes.

Custom Furniture
We offer a full catalog of ready-to-order pieces but if you need something special we can order it for you. Get a custom bedroom, dining room, living room, or office set made to your specifications. Give us the dimensions, description, and stain color you are looking for and we will get you a quote.
































