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Homes & Gardens
Homes & Gardens
Charlotte Olby

'Look for Opportunities to Create Symmetry and Then Break it' – Shea McGee Shares Her Trick to Creating a Perfectly Imperfect Living Room

Designer Shea McGee sat on a neutral couch reading a coffee table book, with large patio doors behind her, two green armchairs and a styled marble coffee table on a patterned rug.

I'm currently in the middle of refining my living room layout. While the final pieces are still coming together, I know I want it to be layered, mismatched, and cozy. Much like it was designed by Shea McGee herself.

So, when Shea took to Instagram this past week to share her tried-and-tested tips for creating a perfectly imperfect living room layout, it struck a familiar chord. As Shea well knows, the key to nailing your furniture scheme (particularly in 2026) lies in a delicate balance between symmetry, asymmetry, and finally ditching matching sets.

Here, Shea talks us through her own design process for creating calm and balance in a living room – with a little help from her latest collection.

'When you're designing with symmetry, it's actually important to then break the symmetry,' Shea says in the video, showing us a charming living room that features items from McGee & Co.'s Spring 2026 Collection.

Symmetry is often seen as the key to bringing calm and balance to the perfect living room layout. It gives the eye something orderly to focus on – think matching furniture sets, perfectly paired lamps, and mirrored joinery. But Shea is quick to point out that when symmetry can actually start to feel overly formal – or worse, a little flat.

'So, if I have a room like this [referencing the living room in the video] and I have pairs of chairs on both sides of the room and even a pair of ottomans – I am looking to break it up in some way.'

One of the most effective ways to do this is by mismatching furniture rather than buying into identical sets.

'So, see how I used two different styles of chairs here?' she explains of the layout above. 'If I had done four [matching chairs], I think it would've felt a bit overwhelming and too perfect.'

(Image credit: McGee & Co.)

It's a good reminder that creating a sense of cohesion doesn't have to mean really obvious repetition. Instead, Shea mixes chair styles placed around the coffee table to break up the obvious symmetry and monotony of matching sets.

The same thinking applies to smaller pieces, too. Rather than flanking the sofa with matching side tables, Shea deliberately opts for variation. 'And then also, if you look at what I did next to the sofa, I kept the side tables asymmetrical!'

This styling choice prevents the room from feeling staged, while still maintaining the principles of interior design through scale, proportion, and balance.

But while it sounds like an easier and freer way to pull together a scheme, it actually requires careful curation to create the perfect mix. Here, Shea uses a red thread of tones and textures that are repeated in the soft furnishings, throw pillows, wooden accents, and objects to create a more layered, collected scheme that still feels curated by a designer's eye.

'So look for opportunities to create symmetry, and then after you do that, look for ways to break the symmetry,' she suggests, advising you to use symmetry as a guide and then soften it with thoughtful mismatches and little asymmetric tweaks that make the space feel layered, inviting, and imperfect in all the right ways.

Shop the Look

For those inspired to recreate the look, the living room from McGee & Co.'s Spring collection shows how thoughtfully chosen pieces can work together without matching outright. From mix-and-match seating to the collection of throw pillows, each element plays a role in creating this characterful scheme.

Designing a well-balanced living room layout is of course key to making the room feel right, but as Shea explains, it can often look a little too staged. By starting with symmetry and then intentionally disrupting it, she creates a space that feels calm yet characterful, polished yet personal – and makes it super easy to recreate in the process.

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