These 20 Fireplace Mantel Ideas Will Warm Your Heart and Your Home

a brightly colored living room by the design brand uchronia, with funky furniture, a white mantel, and a gilded mirror sitting on top of the fireplace
20 Fireplace Mantel Ideas for All SeasonsFélix Dol Maillot

We'll say it once and for all: Stop treating mantel design as a holidays-only kind of endeavor. Sure, Christmas is a chance to go all out with the cherry red pops of color, max out on garlands to your heart's content, and otherwise ensure that Santa has an aesthetically pleasing time at your home. But making your mantel as true to your current design sensibilities (or Pinterest aspirations!) as possible needs to be an all-year pursuit versus something you remember about on the last Thursday of November.

We've rounded up the below ideas—pulled from the ELLE DECOR archives and standout interior designer projects both—to get you all fired up about your upcoming fireplace mantel redesign. There's something here to suit all fancies: whether you actually want to go fancy (rich blue hues and awe-inspiring artwork hanging above), tap into something more Art Deco (as ELLE DECOR A-Lister Hannes Peer did in Milan, with the help of yellow marble), or ditch the fireplace's traditionally rectilinear shape altogether.

Cue your mantel moment!

We’ll say it once and for all: Stop treating mantel design as a holidays-only kind of endeavor. Sure, Christmas is a chance to go all out with pops of red, max out on garlands, and otherwise ensure that Santa has an aesthetically pleasing time at your home. But making your mantel as true to your current design sensibilities (or Pinterest aspirations!) as possible needs to be an a year-round pursuit.

A particular trend of note in the world of fireplace mantels is to make them say something. In other words, designers are increasingly choosing to be bolder and more expressive with how they doll up their fire decor. Designer Sarah Tract, founder of Sarah Tract Interiors, suggests exercising a bit of restraint, though. “Go bold with the stone and minimal with the design. Let the stone speak for itself and the beauty shine through with a simpler and cleaner design,” she tells us.

We’ve rounded up the below ideas—pulled from both the ELLE DECOR archives and standout interior designer projects—to get you all fired up about your upcoming fireplace mantel redesign. There’s something here to suit all fancies, whether you actually want to go fancy with rich blue hues and awe-inspiring artwork hanging above; tap into something more Art Deco, as ELLE DECOR A-Lister Hannes Peer did in Milan; or ditch the fireplace’s traditionally rectilinear shape altogether. Get ready to bring on the heat!

Blue Statement Mantel

Picasso, in his Blue Period, would approve of this Atelier Davis–designed mantelpiece. Its highly pigmented, glossy blue color provides the perfect backdrop for all the art scattered throughout this family room, but especially the Michi Meko painting right above the hearth.

a living room with a fireplace mantel painted a rich blue with an abstract artwork in a similar color palette hanging above
Elliott Fuerniss

Mirrored Mantel

Mirrors are a common choice to put above the mantel—doubling the room, at least visually, and letting the gaze travel upward. Common does not have to be boring, though. Take a page from the ELLE DECOR A-List debut talent and Uchronia founder Julien Sebban, who listened to his clients’ request to make this Parisian apartment look like gemstones and ran with it. This mirror is more than what meets the eye, inset as it is, with layers of Japanese gold leaf in emerald and aquamarine tints.

a brightly colored living room by the design brand uchronia, with funky furniture, a white mantel, and a gilded mirror sitting on top of the fireplace
Félix Dol Maillot

Prim and Posh Mantel

This Louis XVI mantel is the definition of dazzling. Its veiny, brown marble plays up the surrounding furniture’s similar color scheme. Do it like ELLE DECOR A-List firm Cullman & ­Kravis did in this New Jersey home and further elevate the mantel situation via fancy sconces and a neoclassical Italian chandelier.

a posh living room with a neoclassical italian chandelier, and bright painting hanging over the louis xvi marble mantel
Eric Piasecki

Plaster-Powered Mantel

Why settle for a simple mirror or painting over your mantel when you can instead install a massive wall plaster with Greek motifs on it? This one, by Léon Georges Baudry from the 1940s, adds instant drama to the space and contrasts exceptionally well (if we say so ourselves!) with the black firebox brickwork.

james huniford cottage in westchester county, new york featuring a fireplace with a brass screen, leather armchairs, and wall prints on the walls
Matthew Williams

Dramatic Mantel

“The original mantel let the room down, while this is more of a sculpture,” designer Colette van den Thillart tells ELLE DECOR, referring to her inventive sunburst fireplace surround pictured here. The level of drama and surrealism is further heightened by the ’70s-era Willy Daro tables and boomerang-shaped bench nearby. All this is to say: Go big or go home with your mantel redesign!

fireplace mantel with sunburst fireplace surround in a white, matte color, next to some curvy benches, glass cocktail tables, and a green rug
Alex Lukey

Geometric Mantel

Both the funky geometric objets d’art on this mantel and its Giallo Siena marble (that yellow color!) contribute to the undoubtedly Art Deco feel of the living room, designed by ELLE DECOR A-Lister Hannes Peer. See if you can extend the hue of your mantel outward, with an area rug that matches it seamlessly.

living room with white walls and ceiling with square panels, ocher colored marble fireplace, blue and ocher rug, white boucle chairs and sofa, blue wire chair, metal based cocktail tables with marble tops
Helenio Barbetta

Foliage-Filled Mantel

Leave it to ELLE DECOR Titan Kelly Wearstler to create the leafiest mantel design in this mag’s history (which we loved so much, it also appears in our Christmas-specific mantel article!). Here, she employs Spanish moss, magnolia, coyote bush, and more plant varieties, allowing them to naturally hang over the fireplace and breathe life into the space.

a kelly wearstler designed fireplace mantel with spanish moss and other lush foliage hanging over it and contrasting the black marble surround
Courtesy Kelly Wearstler

Alcove-Flanked Fireplace

The mantel here looks like it pops out, doesn’t it? That’s all because of the 18-inch-deep alcoves that flank it. Designer Ashley Lavonne Walker painted the walls an intentional clay green to further underscore the primary bedroom’s sculptural properties while making sure the fireplace continued playing a starring role.

a bedroom with a bed bearing a dark green coverlet and a fireplace surrounded by two deep, arched alcoves
Haris Kenjar

Modern Mantel

A thread of sophisticated calm runs through Augusta Hoffman’s NoHo apartment, seen in the living room’s neutral color scheme, custom curved sofa, no-frills Perle Fine artwork hanging above the fireplace mantel, and, of course, the mantel itself. There’s nothing over the top about its brickwork—painted a barely-there gray—or its shape, but that’s the whole point.

augusta hoffman living room with a simple cream colored fireplace hearth underneath a painting featuring but one color
Tim Lenz

Neoclassical Mantel

It’s hard to find a place for your eyes to land in the grand salon of designer Jean-Louis Deniot’s French manor, and that’s a good thing. Let us point out a key detail in this vignette, however: the stately Louis XVI Carrara marble mantel, topped with intriguing antiques and backed by a room-heightening mirror. P.S.: Did you spot that barometer above the mantel? We could write a whole feature piece on it.

grand salon with a posh interior, including a mirror over the mantel, two upholstered stools next to it and in the foreground, as well as marble lamps with japanese paper shades and a barometer either on or above the mantel
Pascal Chevallier

Fireplace Statue Moment

In this Philip Vergeylen–designed London abode, gilded touches abound. Besides the eye-catching orchids, Charles X chandelier, and lacquered walls in the library, there’s an element that truly lingers in memory long after admiring the scene: the matching bronze satyrs that look as if they’re holding up the entirety of the marble and bronze mantel. How’s that for classical elegance?

interiors of a room with gilded touches, orchids, satyrs holding up the fireplace mantel, and other luxurious touches
Ricardo Labougle

Heavy-on-the-Artwork Mantel

If you want to incorporate art into your fireplace mantel design but in a more creative way than, say, buying something at Anthropologie, consider doing what Suzie de Rohan Willner—CEO of the British fashion and home-goods brand Toast—did in her country house. She put up a collage portrait of herself, made by her daughter, on the living room mantel—thereby infusing the room with priceless personality.

fireplace mantel in suzie de rohan willner house, with an original artwork by her daughter resting on top, including other touches like sculptures, vases, and an oversized green vase filled with flowers
Rachael Smith

Textured Mantel

This mantel is masculine, rustic, and modern all at once. Contributing to the refreshing mix of attributes is the intentionally rough-edged fireplace surround, metal sconce by Ralph Lauren for Visual Comfort, and the framed collection of antique paper aspirin boxes hanging above it all. The latter is most certainly a conversation sparker in designer Sean Anderson’s Memphis bungalow.

sean anderson house tour photo featuring a matel with firewood resting nearby, as well as framed antique paper apirin boxes above
Haris Kenjar

Depth for Days

Remember when we said mirrors over mantels work to multiply the space’s square footage? This fireplace—in designer Jean Liu’s petite Upper East Side studio apartment—is kind of the epitome of that. To achieve this breathtaking effect, pair a mantel mirror with another one on the opposite wall. Some believe this is bad on a feng shui level (trapped energy; a portal for supernatural entities to pass through), but, decor-wise, it’s a win in our book.

a fireplace with a marble surround and mantel with a sculptured bust atop it and a mirror above, decorative molding on walls and ceiling, light amorphous shaped rug, two half moon cocktail tables
Noe DeWitt

Tiled Mantel

Designer Martyn Lawrence Bullard’s Morocco-inspired Hollywood home spares no details (or shyness, for that matter). It’s bold, it’s heavy on the patterns, and it brings out the ELLE DECOR A-Lister’s penchant for “exotica.” His choice to tile the fireplace mantel in striking black and white—just like the trellis ceiling overhead—is one we approve of.

brightly patterned and morocco inspired living room with green couches, a tiled mantel, a tasseled chandelier, and brass palm tree lamps
Douglas Friedman

Whimsical Mantel

This mantel arrangement in a Roman penthouse is as adorable as they come. First off, the sculptures by Giuseppe Palermo provide an undisputed element of whimsy (we could stare at them, lovingly, for hours). More important, though, the antique bronze mantel is surrounded by custom bookshelves, which integrate it into the room at large while flaunting the owners’ scholarly status.

studio with fireplace and shelves and flowered wallpaper
Serena Eller Vainicher

Sleek Marble Mantel

Interior designer Sarah Tract likes to keep it clean when it comes to dressing up mantels with plants, photos, or trinkets. “Save those elements for other furniture in the space, such as coffee tables, bookshelves, nightstands, and dressers,” she advises, gravitating toward mantel designs like the one here, which benefits from a simple form that lets the veiny marble material do all the talking. If you can’t decide between a work of art or a TV above the fireplace, maybe you don’t have to. In her projects, Tract achieves the best of both worlds with Samsung’s the Frame—half masterpiece, half essential tech item.

a sarah tract interiors project, with a simple fireplace mantel out of veiny marble, paired with a boucle bed throw, gray carpet, soundbar, and tv up top
Reid Rolls

Floor-to-Ceiling Stone Mantel

In Ghislaine Viñas’s Pennsylvania home, the den is the focal point of activity, where the family gathers around an original stone fireplace in colder seasons. With that floor-to-ceiling surround, we’d be there on a daily basis too! A shelf creates added space to showcase unique sculptures—and did you spot that hanging monkey? In a nutshell, we’re obsessed.

in the den a vintage red fabric stool is beside a sofa with two circular mirrors above it, a green floor lamp, a square glass cocktail table, two striped fabric chairs, and two mushroom stools sit near a stone fireplace
JASON VARNEY

Glory to Green

Green is big right now. It always has been, but recently it’s popped off in the form of Sherwin-Williams’s 2025 Colormix Forecast, Charli XCX’s Brat summer trend, and beyond. This Schuyler Samperton–designed fireplace—painted in Farrow & Ball’s Studio Green—taps into both the timelessness and urgency of this color. Bonus points if you choose to reuse the hue in other rooms, like Samperton did via the kitchen’s cabinetry and custom island.

schuyler samperton santa barbara home featuring a green painted mantel with candlesticks and artwork resting on top, as well as a textile pouf in the foreground laying on a patterned area rug
Victoria Pearson

Screened-in Stunner

Fireplace screens are essential for keeping flames at bay, and in some cases—as happened in this James Huniford–designed New York cottage—they can provide the ideal opportunity for tasteful artistic expression. Not to say that the graphic wall art and vintage leather armchairs here (sooo symmetric!) aren’t expressive enough, but the custom brass fireplace screen really seals the deal.

james huniford cottage in westchester county, new york featuring a fireplace with a brass screen, leather armchairs, and wall prints on the walls
Matthew Williams

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