Mirrors

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What a Mirror Does for a Room

A mirror does more than reflect. It anchors a wall, borrows light from across the room, and when the frame is right, reads as art the moment you walk in. That combination — functional, spatial, aesthetic — is why a considered mirror belongs in almost every room.

The Bedroom

The bedroom is the most personal use of a mirror. It is accurate light for getting dressed, a last check before you leave, and a piece that holds the room together when you are not in it. Position it beside a window for the truest colour, or centre it on a wall to anchor the space. A mirror with a considered frame also reads as art between uses — which is more than most furniture can claim.

The Living Room and Entryway

In a living room, a mirror placed opposite a window pulls natural light deeper into the space and makes the room feel considerably larger — one of the most consistent pieces of interior advice for good reason. In an entryway, it does two things at once: a last-look station before you leave, and a decorative focal piece when you return. Pair it with wall art or wall shelves on the adjacent wall and the corner becomes a composition rather than just a surface.

Making Any Room Feel Larger

The principle is simple: a mirror placed opposite a light source doubles the light and extends the sightline. The room reads as bigger without a single structural change. This works at any scale and in any room — it is one of the few interior moves that costs nothing except choosing the right wall.

Choosing the Right Mirror

The decision usually starts with the wall — how much of it you want to fill, what is already around it, and how much of yourself you need to see.

1.Size and proportion — Above a piece of furniture, aim for a mirror roughly two-thirds the width of what is below it — too small and it gets lost, too large and it dominates. For a larger wall, scale up accordingly. A single oversized piece commands the room; several smaller pieces arranged together create a gallery effect that can be more forgiving.

2.How it will sit — Some mirrors mount flat to the wall; some lean and stand independently; some are assembled as tiles across a larger surface. Each placement changes how the room reads. Mounted feels architectural and permanent. Leaning feels considered and relaxed, and can be moved. Tiles give you the most surface coverage without the weight of a single large piece.

3.Frame and finish — Metal and aluminium frames are minimal and suit contemporary rooms. Fabric and upholstered frames add warmth and make a mirror read more like furniture than a utility piece. Frameless tiles keep things seamless and modern. As a rule, echo the tone of your existing furniture and the finish tends to fall into place.

4.One piece or many — A single mirror with a sculptural or distinctive frame reads as art — the kind of piece that earns its wall and works alongside wall sculptures and resin pieces as part of a broader composition. A symmetrical pair or a run of tiles creates a different kind of presence — more architectural, less singular. Both approaches are valid; the room usually tells you which one belongs.

5.Safety — For homes with young children or for pieces going somewhere they could be knocked, look for shatter-resistant glass. Select mirrors in this collection carry that as a built-in feature.

FAQs

The collection includes floor-standing full-length mirrors, full-length mirror tiles for wall coverage, round wall mirrors, an arch mirror with LED lighting, and rectangular wall mirrors — each made in India and designed as a statement piece as much as a practical one.

Yes. The collection includes full-length floor-standing mirrors, full-length leaning pieces in premium frames, and mirror tiles that give you head-to-toe coverage across a wall. The mirror tiles are the most accessible option, starting from ₹899.

A wall mirror mounts to the wall and is typically suited for spaces where floor area matters — bedrooms, living rooms, and entryways where you need a reflection but not necessarily a head-to-toe one. A floor mirror stands or leans independently and gives you a full-length reflection without needing a bracket or fixing. Both types are in this collection; the right choice comes down to how much of yourself you need to see and how much floor space you have to work with.

Opposite a window is the most effective position for light and the illusion of space. In the bedroom, beside natural light gives you accurate colour. In an entryway, facing the main area works as both a last-look point and a welcoming focal piece — though avoid placing it directly facing the front door or directly facing the bed, both of which have practical and Vastu downsides. On Vastu: north or east-facing walls are generally considered auspicious. For detailed placement guidance, our mirror decor guide for Indian homes covers it fully.

Yes — every mirror is packed carefully to travel safely. Our mirrors use high-definition glass, and select pieces feature shatter-resistant glass for added durability. In the rare case a piece reaches you damaged, it is covered by our 10-day replacement policy — just report it within 48 hours of delivery and we will arrange a replacement.

Yes — every piece in this collection is made in India, as featured on Shark Tank India. Buying from this collection supports Indian craft and comes with the assurance of a piece built to last.