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Books, Baskets, One Vase: 9 TV Console Decoration Ideas That Fix an Empty-Feeling Room Fast

Usama Badar
July 01, 2026
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Wood TV console styled with baskets and books, floating shelf above filled with trailing green plants and framed art

The TV wall is the one spot in the living room nobody talks about styling, and yet it’s the first place every eye lands. These 9 TV console decoration ideas prove that the area around your screen deserves as much thought as the screen itself, from stone fireplace builds and fluted wood panels to boho shelf gardens and glass-cabinet elegance. Whatever the room’s energy, there’s a setup here that makes it feel complete.

9 TV Console Decoration Ideas That Turn a Dead Wall Into a Design Moment

The TV console gets a bad reputation as a purely functional piece, the thing that holds the cable box and collects remote controls. But the rooms that feel truly pulled together treat that wall as a composition: the console as the base, the surface above it as a canvas, and everything else as deliberate framing. These 9 ideas run from moody stone and teal cabinetry to sun-bright bohemian plant shelves and quiet Scandinavian restraint. Each one is a reminder that a great TV wall isn’t just something you watch. It’s something you live with, and it should be worth looking at even when the screen is dark.

Stone Fireplace Built-In

Cream ledgestone climbs the full wall height, interrupted mid-centre by a wide electric fireplace and a flat-screen mounted just above it. Deep teal built-in cabinetry flanks both sides, its shelves lit from above with warm amber light bouncing off natural oak boards. A vintage Persian rug in rust, teal, and gold ties the whole composition to the floor. The look is rugged meets refined, the kind of media wall that makes a room feel like it’s been here for decades.

Grey Accent Wall with Tower Shelf

A grey stone-effect plaster panel centres the wall, the TV mounted directly into it while a slim floating walnut media shelf runs horizontal below. To the right, a tall walnut open tower shelf holds creamy vases and organic ceramic objects arranged with room to breathe. Linen-tone curtains frame either side, and a low camel sofa with dark cushions anchors the room from below. It’s restrained, put-together, and easy to live with day to day.

Boho Plant Shelf Above the TV

A single reclaimed-wood shelf spans the full wall above the screen, carrying an entire garden’s worth of trailing pothos, monstera, and climbing vines that spill down either side. Below it, a chunky honey-toned bench console holds wicker storage baskets and a spider plant on each end. The whole wall smells like a Sunday morning. If earthy, layered home decor is the language of your living room, this kind of warm neutral palette takes that same thinking into every corner.

Mid-Century Walnut TV Stand

Off against white panelled wainscoting, a long mid-century walnut TV stand holds its ground on tapered legs, the ribbed sliding doors a quiet nod to the 1960s. The dark slate top surface holds a Marshall speaker, a flip clock, a reed diffuser, and a coffee-table book, objects chosen for how they feel in hand as much as how they look. Nothing ostentatious. A monstera leaf leans in from the right edge. It’s the kind of piece that rewards slow living, unhurried and confident.

Toile Wallpaper Shelf Gallery

Moody grey-and-rose toile de Jouy wallpaper covers the entire wall, its forest-and-ruin scene reading like a fresco at a distance. Three open teak shelves cross the upper half, loaded with books, ceramic vases in cobalt and sage, plants, and small sculptural objects. The TV sits on a low rattan-basket console below, unstaged and honest. A ukulele leans against the wall. It’s not a media wall in any conventional sense, just a beautiful, personal corner of a home someone actually lives in.

Farmhouse Distressed White Console

A chalk-white distressed console with two drawers, open cubby shelves, and brass drawer pulls acts as the TV stand, carrying the set on a stand rather than wall-mounted. Stacked vintage suitcases fill one cubby, wicker baskets fill the others. On top, worn wooden boxes, a coiled rattan bowl, and an aged glass bottle keep company with a pile of coffee-table books. A reclaimed wood mirror leans against the adjacent wall. Slow, gathered, unpretentious and effortlessly warm.

White Console with Christmas Shelf Styling

A long white built-in console runs full-width below the screen, its open-box storage holding mixed wicker and galvanised metal bins in neutral tones. For the season, the surface above is lined with mini pine trees, gold paper tree sculptures, garland, and star lights. White vertical mirrors on either side catch the glow. A round oak coffee table sits in front on a cream shag rug. Proof that even the most functional, storage-forward TV setup becomes something magical with a seasonal layer.

Black Glass-Cabinet Frame TV

A wide black iron-and-glass cabinet sits below a Samsung Frame TV displaying a large abstract painting in soft grey-green tones, the screen indistinguishable from art. The cabinet’s glass-front shelves hold stacked art books, ceramics, and a single carved candlestick on top. A woven jute sisal rug runs beneath, and rattan dining chairs are visible in the adjacent room beyond. The palette is antique black, aged linen, and gentle gold: quiet, considered, collector’s-home calm.

Fluted Oak Console with Frame TV and Sconces

A long low fluted-oak console in warm amber wood carries a Samsung Frame TV above it, the television set to off-mode so its warm grey tone reads as part of the wall rather than an interruption. On either side, black wall-mounted sconces with white drum shades cast evening warmth. The console surface holds a dark ceramic urn, a vase of dried foliage, and small wood-house figurines. From the sofa, through the linen and velvet cushions in the foreground, the whole wall reads like a still life.

Written By

Usama Badar

I'm Usama Badar, the founder of Glimsie. I started this site because so much home, beauty, and style advice feels stuck on repeat: the same trends, the same looks, the same copy-paste tips. It's easy to get lost in all that noise. I wanted to build something different. At Glimsie, home and decor come first, with ideas that feel fresh, livable, and true to the way you actually use your space. Alongside that, we bring the same eye to beauty and fashion: routines and looks that fit real life, not just whatever happens to be trending. My approach is hands-on, built on years of experimenting with spaces, layouts, color, and styling until I find what really works. This site is my way of sharing that vision with you: no over-promises, no fluff, just home, beauty, and style ideas that actually work.

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