How to Create a Green Reading Nook with Plants | Tumbleweed Plants Singapore
Posted on April 10 2026
In this article
A reading nook is a small luxury — a corner of your home dedicated to sitting, reading, and doing nothing productive. Adding plants to a reading nook elevates it from a chair in a corner to a personal retreat. The greenery creates a sense of enclosure and calm, the natural textures soften the space, and the living presence of plants makes the experience of reading feel more restorative.
In Singapore, where homes are compact and dedicated reading rooms are rare, a reading nook is usually carved from a living room corner, bedroom alcove, or balcony space. The plants help define the nook as its own zone — a green boundary that says "this space is for rest."
The Essential Elements
A Comfortable Seat
The foundation. An armchair, a floor cushion, a window seat, or a hanging chair. The seat determines the nook's position, and the plants are arranged around it.
Good Lighting
Reading requires adequate light — natural or artificial. A floor lamp or clip-on reading light is essential if natural light is limited. The lamp itself can become part of the plant display (a floor lamp rising from behind plants creates beautiful backlighting).
Plants
Three to five plants create an immersive green atmosphere without overcrowding the space. The arrangement should feel enclosing — like sitting inside a garden — without being claustrophobic.
A Side Surface
A small table, stool, or stack of books for your cup of tea, reading glasses, and current book.
Plant Arrangement for Reading Nooks
The Canopy Effect
The most immersive arrangement mimics a natural canopy:
Above: A hanging plant or trailing plant on a high shelf directly above or beside the seat. Pothos, String of Hearts, or a Boston Fern suspended from a ceiling hook creates a living canopy overhead.
Behind: A tall floor plant behind the chair. A Fiddle Leaf Fig, Bird of Paradise, or tall Snake Plant rising behind your head creates a green backdrop visible when you look up from the page.
Beside: One to two medium plants flanking the chair at arm level — on a plant stand, small table, or the floor. Aglaonema, Peace Lily, or a medium Monstera fills the peripheral view with green.
The Wall Garden
If floor space is limited (common in HDB nooks):
- Mount two to three small shelves on the wall beside the chair
- Place small plants (Peperomia, small succulents, propagation jars) on the shelves
- Let a trailing plant cascade down the wall from the highest shelf
- The vertical arrangement uses no floor space while still creating a green surround
The Window Nook
If your reading nook is beside a window:
- Line the windowsill with small plants
- Place a medium plant on the floor beside the window
- Hang a trailing plant from a rod or hook above the window
- The natural light serves both the reader and the plants
Best Plants for Reading Nooks
For Low-Light Nooks (Most HDB Living Room Corners)
Pothos — Trail from a shelf above. Adapts to any light. The cascading vines create the most impact for the least effort.
Snake Plant — Tall, architectural, zero maintenance. Perfect as the "behind the chair" backdrop plant.
ZZ Plant — Glossy leaves reflect what light there is, adding a brightening effect to dim corners.
Aglaonema (Silver Bay or Pink) — Adds colour to a dim nook. One of the few colourful plants that tolerates low light.
For Medium to Bright Nooks
Monstera — The split leaves create a tropical atmosphere beside the chair.
Boston Fern — Lush, arching fronds hung above the nook create the ultimate canopy.
Calathea — The patterned leaves give you something beautiful to look at between chapters.
Bird's Nest Fern — Broad, wavy fronds add a soft, tropical texture beside the seat.
For Small Nooks
Peperomia — Compact varieties fit on a narrow shelf or side table without encroaching on the reading space.
Small Snake Plant 'Hahnii' — A compact rosette that fits on the smallest surface.
Air plants (Tillandsia) — No pot needed. Mount on the wall, place on a shelf, or display on driftwood.
Styling Considerations
Do Not Block the Light
Plants should enhance the nook, not darken it. Avoid placing large, leafy plants between the reading seat and the light source (window or lamp). Position plants to the sides and behind.
Keep the Seat Accessible
You should be able to sit down and stand up without pushing through foliage. Leave clearance around the seat — the plants should frame the space, not obstruct it.
Scent
Consider a subtly fragrant plant for the nook — a jasmine (if bright enough), or fresh herbs like lavender or mint on the windowsill. The scent adds a sensory layer to the reading experience.
Sound
A small tabletop water feature near the nook — combined with plants — creates an ambient soundscape. Not essential, but elevates the retreat feeling.
Building on a Budget
You do not need expensive plants or furniture:
- Chair: A $30-$50 floor cushion or a repurposed dining chair with a throw blanket
- Plants: Start with one Pothos cutting in a glass jar ($0 if propagated from a friend's plant) and one small plant ($10-$15)
- Shelf: A $10 floating shelf from a hardware store
- Lamp: A $20 clip-on reading light
Total: under $100 for a functional, green reading nook.
Growing Over Time
Start small and add plants as you find what works in the space:
- Month 1: One trailing plant on a shelf, one small plant on a side table
- Month 3: Add a floor plant behind the chair
- Month 6: Add a hanging plant overhead
- Ongoing: Propagate from existing plants to fill gaps for free
Reading Nook Styles
Minimalist
One tall plant behind the chair. One small plant on a side table. Clean pot colours (white, grey). No clutter.
Bohemian
Multiple trailing plants, macrame hangers, a mix of pot materials (terracotta, woven baskets), floor cushions, layered textiles.
Tropical
Large-leaved plants (Monstera, Bird of Paradise, ferns), warm wood tones, rattan or bamboo furniture. A holiday-at-home feel.
Scandinavian
A simple armchair, a single statement plant (Fiddle Leaf Fig or tall Snake Plant), a wool throw, a floor lamp with warm light. Calm and uncluttered.
Shop Plants for Your Reading Nook
Browse our indoor plant collection for plants that create the perfect reading retreat. From trailing Pothos to floor-standing statement plants, we deliver across Singapore.
A reading nook surrounded by plants changes how you read. The green periphery quiets the room visually, the natural textures soften the harsh lines of walls and furniture, and the living presence of plants creates a sense of being in a garden rather than a flat. You pick up a book, settle into the chair, glance up at a trailing vine catching the light, and the world outside the nook recedes. That is the point.
Quick summary
Key Takeaways
- The Essential Elements
- Plant Arrangement for Reading Nooks
- Best Plants for Reading Nooks
- Styling Considerations
- Building on a Budget
- Reading Nook Styles
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