Choosing scatter cushions for your sofa and living room
A scatter cushion does more than add comfort to a sofa. Chosen well, it introduces texture, warmth, and a layer of personality to a room that furniture alone cannot provide. The key is to think in terms of fabric first. A plain linen cushion on a sofa brings a quiet, considered quality that suits almost any scheme. Add a wool cushion with a hand-woven stripe alongside it and the interplay of textures becomes the point, neither competing, both contributing.
Neptune's scatter cushion collection is built around natural fibres throughout. Linen, wool, cotton, and sheepskin sit at the core of the range, chosen for their tactile quality and the way they sit naturally alongside Neptune's wider collection. Each scatter cushion is filled with 100% white duck feather for a plump, settled feel that holds its shape without feeling rigid. Covers are removable with concealed YKK zips across the range, making care straightforward.
The collection spans plain and textured designs, printed linens, hand-woven wool stripes, and sheepskin, giving enough variety to layer across a sofa or armchair without the room feeling busy. For those who want to add seating at floor level, the Orissa woven jute floor cushion offers a more relaxed, artisanal option that works equally well indoors or out. For outdoor use, Neptune's dedicated outdoor cushions collection offers weather-resistant designs made for garden sofas, chairs, and benches.
Natural fabrics, considered design
Neptune's approach to scatter cushions follows the same principle as the wider collection; start with natural materials and let the texture do the work. The palette is honed to warm neutrals and earthy tones, making it straightforward to mix designs across a sofa without the arrangement feeling overdressed. A plain linen cushion alongside a hand-woven wool stripe, or a printed linen next to a sheepskin, creates the kind of layered, textured quality that gives a living room its character.
Some designs in the collection are created in collaboration with independent textile makers. The Grace cushion, for example, features an original hand-drawn floral design by London-based textile designer Beki Bright, whose work draws on eighteenth-century harvest etchings for its inspiration. This connection to craft and artisan making gives the printed cushions a depth that goes beyond pattern alone.