Why Most people begin with Pinterest.
A quick search. A few saved images. A board that starts to take shape. Bright bay windows. Soft white panels. Light filtering through angled louvres onto wooden floors.
That is not a bad place to start. But if you are choosing shutters for your home this year, especially in a period property across East London, it is worth slowing down slightly. Shutters are not just decorative. They sit within the architecture of your home and become part of how a room feels, functions and ages. That means the research stage matters more than most people realise.
How should you approach shutter research properly?
Not quickly. Not impulsively. Properly. And Start With Your Home, Not the Internet.

Before you look outward, look inward.
Stand in front of your windows and study them. How tall are they? How deep is the recess? Are they slightly uneven? Is it a bay? How high are your ceilings?
Victorian terraces in Leyton often have tall sash windows with generous proportions. Georgian townhouses in Hackney may have narrower panes but greater symmetry. Modern flats in Bow can have entirely different glazing systems with shallow reveals.
Pinterest does not know your ceiling height. It does not know your brickwork, your cornicing, or the way light moves through your rooms at four o’clock on a February afternoon.
Your home does.
The most successful shutter projects we see always begin with understanding the structure of the building first.
How to Build a Focused Inspiration Board
Now you can open Pinterest. But with intention.
Instead of saving everything that catches your eye, filter ruthlessly. Save only homes that resemble yours. Similar window shapes. Similar property styles. Similar light conditions.
A bright Californian living room with enormous picture windows may look beautiful, but it is unlikely to translate well to a Victorian bay facing a street in Walthamstow.
If you are mid-renovation or planning a room refresh, this is where your board can do more than just gather shutter ideas. Save images that capture the overall feel you want for the space. Paint colours you keep returning to. Flooring textures. The way joinery and panelling work together. How a room balances natural light with warmth and privacy. Your shutter choice will sit within all of these decisions, so a board that reflects the whole room gives you a much clearer picture than one focused on shutters alone.
As the board grows, look for patterns in what you are saving.
Are the shutters full height? Are they tier-on-tier? Is the louvre size large and contemporary, or smaller and traditional? Are the finishes warm or crisp? Do the rooms feel minimal or layered?
Research becomes useful when it is selective. The goal is not to create a mood board with two hundred images. It is to understand what consistently resonates and why.
What are the most common mistakes made during the shutter research phase?
Focusing entirely on colour. White or off-white. Bright or soft. Painted or stained.
Colour matters, of course. But proportion often has a far greater visual impact.
Look closely at the images you have saved. How large are the louvres in relation to the window height? Where do the panels split? How do the shutters sit within the recess?
In taller sash windows, larger louvres can feel balanced and calm. In smaller or narrower windows, oversized slats can overwhelm the space entirely.
Pinterest rarely talks about this. But proportion is what makes shutters feel architectural rather than added on. When it is done well, shutters look as though they belong to the property, not as though they were fitted afterwards.
This is true of the wider renovation too. The best rooms work because every element feels proportionate. Skirting boards, cornicing, radiator covers, window dressing. When one piece is out of scale, the whole room feels slightly off. Shutters are no different.
How you want the room to feel?
Before you narrow down styles decide on the mood first.

Calm and understated? Structured and symmetrical? Warm and layered? Light and minimal?
A living room painted in earthy neutrals might benefit from shutters with a slightly warmer finish. A crisp, bright kitchen could suit a cleaner white. A bedroom with deep wall colours might call for something that contrasts gently rather than blends in completely.
But this decision is not purely aesthetic. It is practical.
Do you want light diffused softly across walls in the morning? Do you need privacy at street level without closing the room off entirely? Are you working from home and trying to reduce glare on a screen?
Shutters influence how a room feels throughout the day. Researching with mood in mind helps you avoid choosing purely on appearance and steers you towards something that actually works with the way you live.
What Else Do you Need to Consider?
You need to think about the actual purpose of the shutters.
Design research can become overly visual. But shutters are practical. They are used every day.
If your living room faces directly onto the street in Stoke Newington, privacy may be your priority. Cafe style shutters can work beautifully there, allowing light above while screening below.
If you have a south-facing bedroom in Hackney, full height shutters with adjustable louvres may give you more control over glare and warmth across the seasons.
If your home has older, slightly uneven plasterwork, precise measuring and thoughtful installation will matter more than the latest design trend.
This applies to the renovation as a whole. The rooms that feel best to live in are not always the ones that photograph the most beautifully. They are the ones where someone thought carefully about daily life. Where the light works. Where the layout makes sense. Where the materials age well and the finishes hold up.
Research should always return to lived experience. Ask yourself not just how you want the room to look, but how you want it to function.
When Should I Decide on The Style?
Once you have understood the architecture, the proportions, the mood, the light, and the way you live, then you can confidently choose the shutter style itself.
Full height shutters work beautifully in taller sash windows and offer maximum control over light and privacy.
Tier-on-tier designs suit period homes where flexibility matters and symmetry feels important. You can open the top and bottom sections independently, which is ideal for rooms where conditions change throughout the day.
Cafe style works well in street-facing rooms where privacy is needed but light should not be sacrificed.
Solid panels can enhance the weight and heritage of older properties, especially where insulation and darkness are priorities.
When research is done in this order, the decision tends to feel obvious rather than overwhelming.
Why is Research so Important When Deciding Your Shutters?
Shutters are not a temporary accessory. They become part of your home’s character for years, often decades. That is why this stage matters.
Pinterest is a brilliant starting point. But the homes that feel truly considered are the ones where inspiration has been filtered through architecture, proportion and practicality. The same is true whether you are choosing shutters, re-plastering a hallway, or rethinking an entire room from the ground up. Good research is patient research.
Because good design is not just about what is popular now. It is about what will continue to feel like home.
If you are beginning to think about shutters for your home, we are always happy to talk it through. A home visit is the best place to start.



