Get 15% off 3 Soft Furnishing Item Orders
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Buying furniture because it’s discounted is not quite the same as buying shampoo or a multipack of crisps. The stakes are higher. A dodgy sofa doesn’t just dry your hair out - it sits there, unforgiving, for years, silently reminding you of an impulse-click through an "exclusive" email offer. So…Buying furniture because it’s discounted is not quite the same as buying shampoo or a multipack of crisps. The stakes…
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Buying furniture because it’s discounted is not quite the same as buying shampoo or a multipack of crisps. The stakes are higher. A dodgy sofa doesn’t just dry your hair out - it sits there, unforgiving, for years, silently reminding you of an impulse-click through an "exclusive" email offer. So when Graham & Green - purveyor of artfully eclectic homewares since 1974 - starts pushing seasonal "top picks" and spring discounts, it’s worth asking: is this a real opportunity to invest in distinctive pieces, or the kind of decorative distraction that looks better on Instagram than in your living room?
Graham & Green’s spring catalogue is "landing soon," which is either a charmingly analog throwback or a gentle nudge to join their email list. The promise is clear: sign up to see what’s coming, and maybe get early access to a price cut on a Maree striped cushion or a birch-and-green cuckoo clock that might - depending on your threshold for whimsy - either complete your hallway or haunt it.
The company's 4.85 rating, based on 5,687 reviews, suggests a high level of customer satisfaction - though, as always, it’s worth noting that people who buy £95 ceramic animal lamps may not be the harshest critics. That said, Graham & Green does seem to attract a certain kind of loyalist: design-aware, brand-discerning, and largely unfazed by the markup on a "yellow stripe creamer jug" that costs more than your lunch.
Actual deals tend to be more curated than chaotic. Don’t expect blanket markdowns or the furniture equivalent of a fire sale. NHS workers and students get a modest discount - typically around 10% - which, while not life-changing, is better than nothing if you were already planning to drop £750 on a recamier. There are coupon codes floated around seasonally, and a "Last Chance" section that - refreshingly - includes some genuine price cuts on overstock items, rather than just rebranded full-price pieces.
As interior expert and writer Alice Rawsthorn puts it, "Good design should be both aesthetic and practical - but also honest about what it’s trying to do." Graham & Green, for the most part, does just that. It doesn’t pretend your life will change with a new mirror. The copy is aspirational, but not delusional. Their "Your home is the most important place in the world" mission statement is perhaps a touch earnest - but in a way that’s hard to fault. Everyone needs somewhere to collapse at the end of the day.
The garden range is quietly impressive. The Moss Green Reclining Garden Chair (£165) manages the rare feat of looking good without sacrificing comfort - a claim garden furniture often makes but rarely delivers on. The metal frame feels sturdy, the recline mechanism doesn’t scream when used, and the green isn’t the kind of green that feels forced into a spring palette.
Home accessories, meanwhile, swing between delightful and decoratively overdetermined. The Tomato Vine Ceramic Candle (£28) is a candle that smells vaguely like fresh produce and comes in a tomato-shaped jar - a sentence nobody should have to type, but here we are. It’s charming. It’s absurd. It will impress at dinner parties, and confuse your in-laws.
Pricing remains a sticking point for many. A £16 creamer jug is cute; a £395 lighting fixture that looks like a mid-century jellyfish is more divisive. Still, there’s a certain logic to the pricing: most of the pieces are developed in partnership with small artisans - not factories - and the attention to detail, finishes, and materials is generally solid. There’s a story behind most pieces, and while some of those stories are better told than others, the company’s efforts to be transparent - especially about its "Conscious Commitments" and charitable partnership with Jamie’s Farm - feel more grounded than performative.
The inlay furniture is particularly distinctive - think mother-of-pearl sideboards and bone-inlay coffee tables handcrafted in India. These aren’t fast-fashion pieces for your home. They’re heavier, more permanent, and priced accordingly. Not for everyone, but for the right buyer, they might hit that elusive design sweet spot between "timeless" and "talking point."
With five decades under their belt, Graham & Green doesn’t try to compete on price. They’re not Wayfair; they’re barely Habitat. What they offer instead is curation with a clear point of view - and just enough promotional sugar to make the investment easier to swallow. If you’re redecorating one room, or just interested in one object that won’t blend into the background, their new arrivals and spring edits are worth scanning. Just maybe think twice before you buy the candle shaped like a tomato. Or don’t. It’s your house.
Graham & Green, a family-run outfit since 1974, offers a range of delivery options that span from the brisk and affordable to the slow and costly—depending largely on the size of your item and your postcode.
Standard tracked delivery within mainland UK is a modest £6.95 and promises arrival in 2–3 working days. Larger parcels bump that up to £15. Furniture, predictably, begins at £35 and can stretch up to £80 for sofas, with optional in-home assembly for an extra £25—a polite way of saying, “We’ll do it, but only if you pay us.”
Lead times for furniture vary: small pieces take 1–2 weeks, while made-to-order sofas politely excuse themselves for 8–12 weeks. In peak periods, delays are described as “slight.” (One hopes they are.)
Highlands, islands, Northern Ireland, and the Republic of Ireland face longer waits and steeper fees, with some routes requiring direct contact—an analogue solution for a digital age. Deliveries to Jersey may incur a GST, but helpful humans are available to calculate this for you. Outside the UK? They won’t ship internationally, but they’ll deliver to your UK-based forwarding service of choice.
Delivery specifics are—refreshingly—specific. You’ll get tracking links, time slots, and even a heads-up call before your sofa arrives. But don’t expect much ceremony: packaging removal and upstairs delivery depend entirely on weight and willingness.
Miss your appointment and you’re on the hook for redelivery. Unsurprising, but worth noting in your calendar.
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⭐ Rating: 4.6 / 5 (71 votes)