Styling a bedside table can get complicated. On the one hand, the surface of the table offers an opportunity to decorate with personal treasures, artwork, flowers and sentimental photographs. On the other hand, there are practical concerns, such as reading light and storage needs that have to be taken into account.
In the most recent House Beautiful, their "Send us a Picture" column featured designers' nightstands, with accompanying quotes. It was revealing to say the least, and the sentiment in terms of styling a nightstand ranged from a "more is more" mentality, to clean, organized and functional approach.
For some, sleeping near cherished items is important. Such is the case for designer Rodman Primack, who was quoted saying: "Our bedside tables are mini-shrines to things we love. My side is filled with little animals and trinkets that my niece has given me." There's an entirely different camp of people, who need a clutter-free environment. Designer Amanda Nisbet said this about the issue: "Clients always seem to want tables with lots of storage, but I prefer mine to be clean and uncluttered."
Obviously there's a happy medium. The first step in achieving a stylishly decorated bedside table that functions according to your needs is deciding what your needs are. Oftentimes, essentials include:
• Storage for books, day-planners, journals, periodicals, and other reading materials.
• Space to hold a glass of water or carafe.
• An adequate source of light.
• A container to hold small items such as jewelry, watches, glasses, and accessories you take off before sleeping.
• Space for candles or a container to hold fresh flowers.
Here are some ways to achieve a functioning nightstand without sacrificing on aesthetics:
• If having space to arrange cherished trinkets, artworks, framed photographs or vessels for flowers is a must, consider attaching a swing-arm lamp to the wall (images 1, 2). Table lamps usually take up a lot of surface area. By eliminating this element, you're left with plenty of surface area to put books and pretty objects of sentiment.
• Use a table with multiple levels, and possibly a drawer (images 3, 4). Store the more practical things on the second level or in a basket, leaving the tabletop clear to artfully arrange your favorite decorative accessories.
• Choose things that you personally appreciate and never get sick of. After all, you're the one doing the actual living in the room. There can sometimes be a tendency to decorate with trendy, ultra-hip wares to make a statement. While decorating like this probably looks cool, if you yourself don't find it aesthetically pleasing, it will be hard to live with. This is why people stick to sentimental trinkets, framed photographs, and flora (image 5).
• If space is an issue, turn your nightstand into a desk or vanity (images 6, 7, 8). Style the desk to suit whatever needs the surface will provide: cups of pens if it's a place to write a letter, makeup stored in an pretty container if you'll be using it as a vanity, always leaving adequate surface space. The chair can be moved to the side at night when you're in bed if it's distracting.
• Hiding your personal items behind a skirted table is a great solution for those who don't like their necessities exposed (image 10). Both a rounded table-skirt (a bit more old fashioned) or a rectangular, more tailored skirt are viable options. If you gravitate towards clean and minimalistic, choose a solid simple linen; for a bolder look, try a floral or chintz! In the latter case, the skirt becomes a statement, so arranging a minimal amount of accessories on the tabletop is ideal.
FIRST ROW
1. Design Sponge
2. Style by Emily Henderson
3. Style at Home
4. Lonny
5. Rue Magazine
SECOND ROW
6. Houzz
7. Phoebe Howard
8. Lonny
9. Coco + Kelly
10. Lonny
(Images: As credited above)











Commercial Flour Sa...
Cute, as long as it can hold 10+ partially completed books, it should work.
Flowers on a nightstand is a disaster waiting to happen with water everywhere.
I don't know why I have such a difficult time with nightstands. I have been wanting to replace mine for six years and just can't find anything I like.
I love the lamp in the last photo. I have no trouble finding lamps I like. :)
Very inspiring -- I have to get my master bedroom's nightstands in order!
Very few of these look functional. Where are the alarm clocks? How about a cup or coaster? Let us not pretend this is real life. I think at least two of them you couldn't turn on the light without getting out of bed.
@Violet+Violet - I hear you. I'm going on nearly 7 years of "hunting" for the right thing. It's really hard for some reason, harder than any other piece of furniture. At least for me. Everything else is a case of "I want/could live with/really love THAT." But not with nightstands. :(
I've been using a small dresser as a night stand. I really really like having drawers next to my bed. Just don't want to have everything out. I'm a put things away, when possible, kind of guy. Lately I've been using an Ikea Rast hacked as a night stand.
I'm getting old... seriously, who cares about styling their nightstand!?!?
I am with you @Anna Europe. Light, book, glasses, water, pepper spray. It's all about what I need close at hand. Since I had no more than 20" I got the smallest one I could find that sort of matched and then put a pin-up swing-arm light on the wall. Now let's talk about something really important like the fuzzy rug next to the bed so you don't shock your toes on a cold morning!
I also had a hard time coming up with a night stand that I liked, was the right size, and was decently priced. I couldn't even find the right sized Ikea item to hack. I was looking into having a table cut down to size when the welder said, "I can make that for $150." Woah! It would cost me $500 to get even close to what I wanted from room and board!
Here's link to the tables in process. There will be a glass top and and a glass shelf about 8" from the bottom. I haven't purchased the glass yet, but can you believe it? Two custom steel parsons tables for $300.
http://www.athomeonthehill.com/athomeonthehill/2013/1/31/winner-winner-chicken-dinner
I concur about the unrealistic lives the people using these nightstands must lead. No alarm clocks. Everyone has arms longer than an NBA center to turn off the lamps unless they have a clapper. (Do elegant interiors employ the clapper? Inquiring minds want to know!). No one is thirsty. No one sneezes or has a waste basket. Sheesh!
I agree with the previous posters.
Flowers on a nightstand are great for photos, but unrealistic in real life.
Same goes for the items on the top of the nightstand. No clocks, no tissues, no case for glasses. People don't live in a magazine spread.
Image 6 - thank you! I have been scouring the internet around forever for a pragmatic way to display my painted deer antlers and unread coffee table books.
safety tip: put your car key next to your bed, in case of emergency you can push the alarm button.
Alarm clocks? Seriously? I use an iPhone to wake me up - takes up no space at all.
I have been looking for nightstands that I like forever too. Why is it so difficult? I'd love for ours to have drawers--right now we are using barstools, with flat tops, that I painted. They are unattractive and too small, but I really can't find anything I'd like better than I'm willing to spend money on.
We use our phones as alarm clocks though, so we don't have separate alarm clocks anymore. I generally keep a glass of water nearby, and recently tried flowers, but was afraid I'd bump the vase in the night and spill it on my phone and books.
I have a three-drawer end table on one side of my bed, and a low, two-drawer dresser (about the same height) on the other side. Aside from the bed, this is the only furniture that fits in my room. The dresser functions as my main nightstand because of the side I sleep on. It's nice having all that surface space but I don't need it. I need a lamp, a clock, and room for my book, notebook, water, cell phone, and glasses. I can't think why I'd want all that other junk there. Seems to me that some stylists really promote the idea of filling up every available surface with tchotchkes.
I made my own nightstand. Wanted something that would hide medical equipment, but keep it easy to access for night use. An open area above it for tissue box, a figurine, and my phone.
The top is bare as my kitties like to lay on it or jump back and forth - anything on the top would be knocked off.
Light is kept on my dresser nearby along with a little cup of water.
I'm very pleased with how my nightstand turned out. It's very functional for my needs and cute.
<img src="http://i215.photobucket.com/albums/cc28/Nancy33Sales/Nightstand.jpg" border="0" alt=" photo Nightstand.jpg"/>
I agree with a lot of posters. Maybe it's an age thing. I want my nightstand to have a drawer and a shelf ( for books, magazines, and a notebook). I do use my phone as an alarm clock and as a music source, but I have water, eye drops, lip balm, tissues, lamp, a water bowel for the cats (weird?). Sometimes a pill bottle. Some items I want to hide away- I don't want it to look like a hospital bed. Hence the drawer. I'm still looking, thought I like #1.
I found a narrow 3-drawer unit that some one had obviously hacked off an old dressing table--you can see the amputation site. Fits perfectly into a small space, has a deep enough drawer for a box of kleenex (my dog eats them straight out of the box), & just enough space on top for the neccessities. Once I paint it & treat it to new hardware it will even look nice; right now it's on the far side of the bed. I've seen many similar dressing tables in thrift shops that are not worth saving in their original form, so you could even hack a matched set for a lot of storage in a small footprint.
I have a water bowl for my cat too! It's under my table on the floor, but if I don't have one at all, she climbs all over my nightstand and face trying to drink out of my water glass.
I hate typical nightstands... I got two accent tables in distressed black instead. They each have 2 drawers and fit perfectly on both sides of the bed without as much as an inch to spare.
I use two IKEA helmer units - lots of drawers for stuff, just enough room on top for a big lamp and my kindle. Works for me, though sometimes I wish I had something more... something. Less utilitarianish. But they do work so well, so I keep them.
bellamodern, I use a Helmer as well.
We have 2 speakers that we repurposed into floating side tables. They are unique, cost-effective and space savers. We love them! http://www.jjmodern.com/2012/10/04/speaker-box-table-tops/
I am totally with @Anna Europe on this. Why style the nightstand unless you're doing an open house in a model home? Why not just have stuff on it that you use while in bed: tissues, lotion (Yes, lotion! Does no one else get dry, itchy legs at night, no matter how faithfully they might moisturize during the day?), books, pen and paper (for noting noise complaints or for those odd ideas that occur only in the twilight state between waking and sleep), foreign language flashcards ... as long as the stuff is neatly arranged, why worry about "style"?
@inneedofmakeover - I never thought of that! Since our bedroom window is right over the driveway of our house, it makes perfect sense in our case. If nothing else, it might frighten someone away (our neighbors are so far away they might not even hear it!)
Good thinking!
Seriously. Not everyone is attached at the hip to his phone.
This is such an awesome post! I am so excited to try and find a proper bedside table after doing without one for so long.... I currently use the top of a bookcase :/ I will definitely be referring to this post in the near future!
These are great ideas. But what I really want to know is how many of you actually keep your nightstand looking like this (and I don't mean for photoshoots). We dont have drawers on our nightstands, so they seem to always accumulate clutter, especially my husband's who doesn't understand the meaning of "styled nightstand". Got any tips?