Butler Specialty Co.
Bookcases and shelves do double duty—storage that keeps clutter in check and display space that shows off your style. Shop designer-curated étagères, bookcases, and wall shelves sized for every room.
Butler Specialty Co.
Butler Specialty Co.
Butler Specialty Co.
Butler Specialty Co.
Moes Home Collection
Four Hands
Start with what you're storing and where. Closed-back bookcases ground a room and hide a busy backdrop; open étagères keep things airy and can double as a room divider. Measure your wall height and leave a few inches of clearance at the top—and if it's tall, plan to anchor it to the wall for safety.
Étagères with slim metal frames feel light and modern; solid wood bookcases read classic and substantial. Ladder shelves lean casual and suit small spaces, while a row of matching bookcases can mimic a built-in for a fraction of the cost. Pick a finish that echoes other wood tones in the room.
A good rule is roughly two-thirds filled, one-third open. Mix vertical stacks of books with horizontal ones, leave deliberate gaps, and use baskets or bins on lower shelves to hide the things you'd rather not see. Closed cabinet bases earn their keep where you need to tuck clutter away.
Work shelf by shelf in layers: lean a piece of art or a framed photo at the back, stack books to add height, and finish with one object—a vase, a bowl, a small plant. Repeat colors across shelves so the whole piece reads cohesive, and let some shelves breathe rather than filling every inch.
Work with a designer in your home, start to finish.
Book a consultationReal spaces designed by Havenly designers, featuring bookcases & shelves — get inspired, then shop the look.
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Shop this room →Match it to the room: low bookcases (under 48 inches) keep sightlines open, while tall units draw the eye up and maximize storage. Always anchor tall, top-heavy pieces to the wall.
A bookcase usually has solid sides and a back; an étagère is an open framework—often metal—with shelves and no back, which feels lighter and more display-focused.
Around 10–12 inches handles most books and décor; deeper shelves (14+ inches) suit bins, baskets, and larger display pieces.
Aim for about two-thirds full, group items in odd numbers, repeat a few colors, and leave intentional negative space so the eye can rest.
Yes—take our style quiz or book a designer, and we'll recommend pieces sized to your room, your routine, and your style.