Curated pack · bedroom accessories cad blocks
Free bedroom accessories CAD blocks for AutoCAD
By Saumyajit Maity · Published 16 Sept 2024 · Updated 13 May 2026
A bedroom layout is mostly bed, wardrobe and bedside tables — but it's the accessories that make it feel like somewhere you'd want to sleep. This free bedroom accessories pack gathers the small styling blocks you reach for most — bedside lamps, plants, rugs, cushions, throws, books and dressing-table props — drawn in plan and elevation, in DWG and ready to insert into AutoCAD 2004 or later. Everything is free for personal and commercial work, with no signup, no watermark and no attribution needed.
Use the pack to dress bedroom plans and elevations for homes, apartments, hotels and serviced accommodation. Because the blocks are drawn at believable sizes, a bedside lamp lands at the right height on the nightstand, a rug sits in proportion under the bed, and cushions stack sensibly on the headboard, so the scheme reads as styled rather than schematic.
Bedroom styling is what turns a presentation from a furniture diagram into a feeling. A bed dressed with cushions and a throw, a lamp glowing on each nightstand and a rug grounding the floor reads as a calm, finished room; the same plan bare reads as a furniture-store delivery. Keeping the styling on its own layer means you can lean on that warmth for the client print and strip back to clean furniture for the construction and joinery drawings.
What's in the bedroom accessories pack
The pack covers the soft and decorative layer of a bedroom. Lighting: bedside table lamps and the odd floor lamp in plan and elevation. Soft furnishings: scatter cushions, bolsters, throws and bed runners that dress the bed. Floor and surface: rugs and runners, plus styling props for the nightstand and dressing table — a small plant, a candle, a stack of books, a tray of bottles.
Because bedroom accessories are seen up close in elevation, the blocks carry enough outline to read as a lamp, a cushion or a plant without cluttering the sheet. Each is a single block reference you can scale and mirror, so you can dress the left and right nightstands symmetrically or vary them, and reflow the styling from one room type to the next.
How to style a bedroom with the blocks
Keep the styling on a dedicated layer — something like A-FURN-ACCS — so you can thaw it for the client visual and freeze it for the construction plan. Style symmetrically where the room is symmetrical: a matching lamp on each nightstand and a balanced run of cushions across the headboard reads as calm and considered, which is exactly the mood a bedroom wants.
In plan, the accessories mostly indicate that a surface or the bed is dressed — a lamp footprint on each nightstand, a rug under the bed. In elevation they do the real work, so spend effort on the headboard wall: lamps at the right height, cushions stacked on the bed, art or a mirror above. Group props on the nightstand into a little vignette rather than scattering single objects.
Per-item notes: lamps, cushions and rugs
Bedside lamps are height-led: a table lamp of roughly 400–600 mm sits well on a 550–650 mm nightstand and casts at the right level for reading in bed. Keep both lamps matched on a symmetrical layout. Cushions and bolsters are about layering — a couple of large cushions behind a couple of smaller ones, with a bolster or a throw, reads as a dressed bed.
Rugs are dimension-driven and easy to get wrong. Under a bed, a rug typically extends well past the sides and foot so the bed sits on it rather than beside it; size the rug block to the bed plus a generous margin. Runners work flanking the bed instead. Keep all of these as block references so a restyle is a quick swap, and the bed, nightstands and wardrobe stay untouched beneath.
Plan and elevation bedroom styling
In plan, bedroom accessories balance the furniture layout and show that surfaces are used: lamp footprints on the nightstands, a rug under the bed, a tray on the dressing table. They stay simple because from above they're just small outlines. The elevation is where the styling sells the scheme, so the headboard wall and the dressing-table wall are where the detailed blocks earn their place.
When you draw the bedroom elevation, the heights matter: bedside lamps clear the mattress and read for reading light, art hangs centred above the headboard, and a mirror over the dressing table sits at a usable height. Many blocks ship both views, so you can place the plan footprint and build the matching styled elevation from one download.
Who uses the bedroom accessories pack
Interior designers and architects dress every presentation bedroom, and the pack also suits students building portfolio room sets, property stagers, and hospitality designers laying out hotel and serviced-apartment rooms at scale. It works for master bedrooms, guest rooms, children's rooms, studio sleeping areas and hotel suites.
Pair the bedroom styling with the furniture, wall-decor and interior-accessories blocks elsewhere in the library to dress a complete room — a bed with cushions and a throw, lamps on the nightstands, art above the headboard and a rug below. Because everything here is free and licence-clear, you can build a bedroom-styling kit once and reuse it across every sleeping space you draw.
Keeping bedroom styling tidy
Bedroom accessories are small and easy to over-do, so favour restraint and reuse. Style the nightstand once as a vignette block and mirror it to the other side, dress one bed and copy the arrangement to similar rooms, and keep everything as block references so the file stays light even across a hotel floor of repeated rooms.
Give the styling layer a light lineweight so it sits behind the furniture rather than competing with it. Freeze that layer for the construction and joinery drawings, where cushions and candles are irrelevant, and thaw it for the presentation. For a repeated hotel room, build one fully styled room as a block so you can drop the entire dressed room into every bay and edit it once if the scheme changes.
Free download
Browse the full library — DWG & DXF, no signup.
Questions
Frequently asked
Are these bedroom accessory CAD blocks free for commercial use?+
Yes. The whole pack downloads free in DWG with no signup, no watermark and no attribution requirement, cleared for commercial bedroom presentations and construction sets, including hotel and serviced-apartment work.
Do the bedroom accessories come in plan and elevation?+
Yes. You get plan footprints for the furniture layout and face-on elevation blocks for the headboard and dressing-table walls where most of the styling happens. Where a block carries both views they're in the same DWG.
What size should an under-bed rug block be?+
Size it so the rug extends past the sides and foot of the bed, letting the bed sit on the rug with a generous margin all round rather than beside it. The blocks are drawn full size in millimetres, so you can scale to the actual bed footprint.
How do I style repeated hotel rooms efficiently?+
Dress one room fully, then make the whole styled room a block and drop it into every bay. Edit the block definition once if the scheme changes and every room updates, which keeps a whole hotel floor consistent and light.
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