For years, many of us believed the same thing about decorating with wood: pick one wood finish, they said, and stick with it. Oak table? Then every shelf, chair leg, and picture frame in the vicinity had better salute to oak! It was the kind of design advice that often left rooms feeling a little too uniform and a little less personal.
Thankfully, that thinking has shifted, and these days the most beautiful interiors aren’t necessarily perfectly matched. Instead, people are exploring how to mix and match wood furniture in bedrooms, dining rooms, living rooms, and more for a layered, slightly unexpected, and characterful look.
So, can you mix wood tones in a room?—Yes, absolutely yes.
Before exploring how to mix wood tones, it helps to understand the different wood finishes commonly used in furniture and flooring. Each species carries its own natural undertones, grain patterns, and color depth, all of which influence how different woods pair.
Understanding these foundational wood tones can help you choose wood finishes that complement each other rather than compete. Then you’re not just choosing furniture. You’re creating visual chemistry.
The most reliable guiding principle when combining different woods is undertone consistency. Some people think wood is wood, brown is brown, and the rest is decorative superstition. Wrong. Just like paint colors, woods have subtle hues and undertones beneath their surfaces.
Some wood tones that go together include:
If you want your wood combination colors to feel cohesive, try to keep the undertones consistent. Woods with similar undertones often look cohesive, even when one is significantly lighter or darker.
One of the most effective strategies for mixing dark and light wood furniture in a living room is the light-medium-dark principle. Rather than placing two similar mid-toned pieces next to each other, try anchoring the room with a dark walnut coffee table, introducing a medium oak media console, and floating a light maple accent piece in the corner. The variation in depth creates rhythm and keeps the eye moving.
If you introduce a specific wood tone once, try to echo it somewhere else in the room, even subtly. A walnut dining table feels more intentional when a walnut picture frame or side table appears elsewhere in the space. That small repetition helps the room feel thoughtfully designed rather than randomly assembled.
Every space needs a starting point. Before you dive into mixing and matching, identify your dominant wood tone. This is usually the largest wood surface in the room, such as hardwood floors, wood-paneled walls, a dining table, or a large coffee table. Once you’ve identified your tone, treat it as your anchor.
For example, light- to medium-oak floors give you a flexible base that works with both dark and light woods. From there, you can build out your wood color palette.
Beyond natural wood tones, the finish applied to furniture dramatically shifts how it reads in a room. Matte, satin, glossy, distressed, or wire-brushed finishes all reflect light differently, which helps separate pieces visually when mixing wood tones. For example:
When mixing different wood finishes, consistency in finish type can compensate for differences in tone. Two pieces with the same matte, natural-oil finish feel related even if one is walnut and the other is oak. Conversely, placing a high-gloss lacquered table next to a heavily distressed piece creates a tension that has nothing to do with color — it’s about surface quality. That combination can absolutely work, but it requires other design choices to smooth the contrast.
Painted furniture is another variable entirely. White, black, or colored painted pieces act almost as neutrals in a wood-heavy room, giving you license to work with bolder wood combinations alongside them without things feeling too busy.
Wood rarely exists alone in well-designed spaces. Upholstery, stone, metal, glass, and textiles all help soften transitions between different wood finishes.
For example:
These material combinations make decorating with wood feel more layered and complete.
The most beautifully decorated rooms are rarely the most perfectly coordinated ones. They’re the rooms that feel like they’ve been collected over time—where the dining table has a history, the bedroom dresser has character, and the accent pieces tell a story. Mixing wood tones is one of the most direct ways to achieve that feeling, and it’s more approachable than most people think.
At the end of the day, mixing wood tones is all about the balance. Repeat certain finishes throughout the room, vary your light-, medium-, and dark-wood pieces, and pay attention to undertones. When done right, mixing and matching wood creates a home that feels curated while adding warmth, texture, and personality in a way that perfectly matched furniture never could. So don’t stress about whether your woods match. Instead, keep the focus on whether they work together.
At CORT Furniture Outlet, you’ll find dining tables, accent tables, and wood furniture in a variety of finishes that make mixing tones easier. Whether you’re adding a new piece to an existing room or slowly layering different textures and materials, browsing online or visiting a local showroom can help you discover furniture that fits naturally into your space.