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Carpentry & Joinery

Tips and advice on bespoke woodwork, fitted furniture, doors, staircases and interior joinery.

Carpentry & Joinery

Steps For Change: Stairway Transformations

Stairs are often one of the most overlooked features in a home. Used every day but rarely styled with intention, they can easily feel tired or purely functional. With the right design choices, stairs can become a real focal point, adding character, light and value to your property.

Stairs are often one of the most overlooked features in a home. Used every day but rarely styled with intention, they can easily feel tired or purely functional. With the right design choices, stairs can become a real focal point, adding character, light and value to your property.

Whether you are updating a traditional staircase or working with MDF stairs in a newer build, there are plenty of ways to transform the look without a full structural overhaul.

Refresh with paint and colour

One of the simplest and most cost-effective ways to transform stairs is with paint. Painting stair risers in a contrasting colour can instantly modernise a hallway, while darker treads help disguise wear and scuffs.

Consider:

  • A soft neutral palette for a calm, airy feel
  • Bold colours on risers for personality
  • A painted runner effect down the centre for visual impact

Add character with stair runners

Stair runners are a popular choice in UK homes, especially in hallways where warmth and noise reduction are priorities. They add texture and colour while protecting the centre of the steps from wear.

Options range from classic wool runners in neutral tones to patterned designs that suit period or contemporary properties. For MDF stairs, runners are often paired with painted edges for a clean, tailored finish.

Make the most of MDF stairs

MDF stairs are common in modern homes and new builds, and while they are often seen as basic, they are extremely versatile.

Popular upgrades for MDF stairs include:

  • Painting in a single colour for a sleek, minimalist look
  • Adding oak or laminate stair nosings for a more premium finish
  • Installing carpet or a runner while keeping MDF risers painted
  • Applying decorative panelling or mouldings to risers

Because MDF is stable and smooth, it provides an excellent base for bespoke finishes when installed and sealed correctly.

Introduce lighting for impact and safety

Integrated stair lighting is both practical and stylish. LED strip lighting under treads or low-level wall lights can enhance safety while creating a high-end feel.

This works particularly well in darker hallways or homes with open-plan layouts, helping define the space without overpowering it.

Use wall space creatively

The wall alongside your stairs offers valuable design potential. Gallery walls, feature wallpaper, panelling or even a contrasting paint colour can help tie the staircase into the rest of your home’s style.

For narrow hallways, lighter colours and mirrors can help reflect light and make the space feel larger.

As with many home transformations, it’s possible to save money and do some or all of the work yourself, but qualified interior designers are likely to have some great ideas, not to mention the tools, know-how and skills to do a great job. Take a look at our directory to find the right trader near you, and follow us on Facebook or X for more inspiration.

Looking for more carpentry & joinery advice?

Find clear, practical answers to common carpentry & joinery questions, helping homeowners understand everyday issues, know what checks they can carry out safely, and when it is best to contact a qualified professional.

  • What types of carpentry work should never be attempted as a DIY project?

    Anything structural - staircases, roof timbers, load-bearing walls, lintels. And anything that needs to meet Building Regulations, like fire doors or stair balustrading.

    Getting structural carpentry wrong isn't just a cosmetic problem - it can affect how safe your home is. Worth paying for a professional who knows what they're doing.

  • Can a carpenter fix a door that won't close properly?

    Yes, and it's a very common call-out. Doors that stick, drop, or won't latch are usually down to one of three things: swelling from moisture, hinges that have worked loose, or the frame moving slightly as the building settles.

    Most of the time it's a straightforward fix. If several doors in the house are playing up at once, it might point to something structural - worth flagging when you get someone in.

  • Do I need a professional to install a staircase or banister?

    Yes. Staircase and banister installation has to meet Part K of the Building Regulations - covering handrail height, baluster spacing, and stair pitch.

    A badly installed staircase or banister is a real safety risk. A qualified carpenter or joiner will make sure it's both structurally sound and compliant.

  • How do I know if a wooden window frame needs repairing or replacing?

    Repair is usually still an option if the frame is structurally sound (no soft or spongy patches when you press it), the rot is only on the surface or in a small section, and the joints are still tight. Surface rot can often be cut back, hardened, and filled with epoxy filler - a good carpenter can make it look like new.

    If the rot goes deep, the frame is badly warped, or the joints have failed, replacement is the more cost-effective route.

  • What causes wooden floors or staircases to creak and can it be fixed?

    Creaks come from movement - boards or treads rubbing against each other, against fixings, or against the structure beneath them as they flex underfoot. It often happens as boards expand or contract with changes in humidity.

    In many cases, screwing things down more firmly or applying a lubricant between moving parts sorts it. If the creak covers a wide area or keeps coming back, a carpenter should take a proper look.

  • What are the benefits of bespoke fitted furniture over flat-pack?

    The main one is fit. Bespoke is built exactly to your space - and in older UK homes especially, that matters. Sloping ceilings, alcoves, chimney breasts, walls that aren't quite square - flat-pack units run into all of these and often end up with awkward filler panels and gaps.

    Bespoke joinery is also generally more solidly built and lasts longer. It costs more and takes longer, but for fitted storage in a room with character, it's usually the right investment.

  • Can a carpenter repair rotting timber or structural woodwork?

    Yes - it's a core part of the job. Surface rot can often be cut back, treated, and filled with epoxy filler that can be shaped, sanded, and painted to match the surrounding wood. Deeper rot in structural timber - joists, window sills, roof timbers - usually means partial or full replacement of that section.

    The important thing is also fixing whatever caused the moisture problem in the first place. Repairing the wood without sorting the damp is just delaying the same issue.

Have a question about TrustATrader?

If you have a question in relation to TrustATrader specifically, please check out the TrustATrader FAQs, with separate lists tailored to consumers and tradespeople. Alternatively, get in touch with our team. We're happy to help!