Home Decor
On this Home Decor category page, colours, sizes, and finishes move in and out as partner retailers refresh ranges and rotate stock. One week it’s 30cm frames and matte black candle holders; the next it’s 45cm canvases, ribbed glass, and brushed brass accents. That turnover is normal. The selection spans wall pieces, soft furnishings, lighting, mirrors, vases, and small accessories, and the same item can appear as a single listing, a colour variant, or a multi-size option depending on who published it. Some listings arrive with full dimensions and materials; others lead with a room photo and a short spec line. There’s no single “set” look.
Read on for how Home Decor listings are grouped, what varies between retailers, and the details worth checking.
Primary groupings you’ll notice
Wall pieces, soft accents, and lighting take up a lot of the category, with art, textiles, and electrics appearing as separate clusters. Some partners publish wall art prints as individual sizes (A4, A3, A2), while others group the same design with multiple frame colours in one listing. You’ll also see mirrors, vases, and candles mixed in, especially when a finish matches (black metal, natural oak, clear glass). It can look messy. Dunelm listings often spell out frame size in cm and whether a mount is included, alongside finish notes like matte or gloss.
Sets, bundles, and variant handling
Home accents are frequently published as singles or sets, and partners don’t treat those formats consistently. A pair of decorative cushions might be one listing labelled “2 pack” with a single size (45x45cm), while another retailer publishes each cover separately and leaves the pad as an add-on item. Small décor also flips between “set of 3” and single pieces, especially for candle holders or mini frames. Short spec lines matter. Habitat entries often call out whether a cushion is cover-only, the zip closure type, and the fabric weave (cotton slub vs velvet).
Sizing, fit, and spec differences
Dimensions are not presented evenly across partners, so the same item type can feel hard to line up side-by-side. With table lamps, some listings lead with total height (for example 38cm) and shade diameter (for example 25cm), while others only state “small” and rely on photos. Cable length and bulb fitting (E14 vs E27) also appear or disappear depending on the retailer’s spec template. Keep it literal. Even within one finish, a lamp base can be wide and low or narrow and tall, which changes how it sits on a 30cm side table.
Materials, build, and functional details
Materials shift the look and the upkeep, and partners describe them with different levels of precision. For ceramic vases, check whether the piece is stoneware or earthenware, and whether the surface is glazed, reactive-glaze, or matte; those finishes show marks differently and can vary between batches. Weight is a real factor. Some vases are heavy enough to stabilise tall stems, while lighter shells suit dried arrangements only, and openings are sometimes stated (for example 4cm neck diameter) rather than shown. Amara listings often include exact height in cm and notes on glaze finish and rim shape.
Common checks people make while browsing
Size first: width, height, and depth in cm, plus whether a mirror measurement includes the frame. For mirror wall decor, check hanging hardware (D-rings vs wire), orientation options, and whether it’s designed for plasterboard fixings or solid walls. With candles, the burn time and wax type (soy blend vs paraffin) changes from one listing to the next, and jar material (glass vs ceramic) affects heat feel. Photos can flatter. For cushions and throws, look for fabric composition (100% cotton vs polyester velvet) and whether it’s machine washable at 30°C.
How discount codes help lower costs when buying Home Decor from Discount Promo Codes
Discount codes relate to saving money on Home Decor by reducing the cost at a partner retailer’s checkout, including for items like scented candles sold as a single jar or a multipack with a stated burn time. The platform provides access to discount codes for partner retailers, and retailer links to their discount code pages may appear alongside product listings. Not every retailer has a code shown at the same time—availability shifts with listing turnover and partner updates. Separately, the service supports a monthly charity donation, with 20% of profits donated each month; that operational link sits in the background rather than changing product specs like wax type or jar material.