Style Guide | Granby Mountain Living Room
Your living room feels off when your brain doesn’t have a clear focal point.
Too many directions. No clear focus. Everything competing.
So your brain keeps scanning. This room fixes that fast.
Everything points to one place — the fireplace centered in the room.
The Franz sofa and Lina club chairs (in Banks Cabernet eco-performance fabric) all face inward centered on the coffee table. No angles, no confusion. Your brain reads the layout instantly: this is where you sit, this is where you gather.
That’s the first shift. Clear focus.
Both the Franz sofa and Lina club chairs are part of our made-to-order line, which means the proportions stay consistent while materials can be customized to fit the space. So even with different finishes, the structure still holds.
Then the materials reinforce it. Wood repeats across the room — walls, ceiling and beams all the same. Then the same tonal range brought in through the coffee table, side table and console. Instead of every piece feeling separate, your brain groups them together as one system. Same with the art and lower fireplace section. Repeatable units your brain only needs to process once.
The leather sofa and fabric chairs stay in a similar tone range. Nothing shiny, nothing pulling your eye away. Your eyes don’t have to keep adjusting. So your brain settles faster.
Now the weight.
The coffee table is solid. The fireplace is heavy. The beams above echo that same structure. Your brain reads all of it as stable — like nothing is going to move or surprise you. That matters more than style.
Then the smaller pieces finish the room.
A vintage wood bowl on the table. A lamp and side table beside the seating. A large wood console behind the sofa. These add variation, but they’re grouped and intentional — not scattered.
So your brain sees them as one thing, not ten.
That’s the pattern here:
One clear focal point.
Materials that repeat.
Weight that anchors.
Details that don’t compete. Nothing extra to figure out. And that’s why the room works — your brain understands it right away.




















































































































































































































































































































































































































































































