From worldly prints and artisanal weaves to painterly abstracts and heritage equestrian designs, decorating continues to celebrate pattern in its most inspired forms. Our appreciation for honest, natural materials remains as strong as ever, while advances in sustainable and stain-considerate textiles are shaping the future of upholstery. And for those who love colour, richly hued velvets and refined earth-led palettes offer enduring ways to elevate a room.
Enjoy the journey.
Interpreting Global Cultures Through Pattern

The desire to explore global cultures through interior design is enduring. Pattern offers a form of escapism when rooted in artistry – from reimagined archival toiles to emblematic geometrics and fabrics that reinterpret design traditions with a contemporary hand.
Velvets such as Japanese Garden draw on the beauty of historic textile artistry, lending homes depth, mood and narrative richness.
This look is not about trend-driven wanderlust, but spaces that ignite imagination, add character, and honour thoughtful global design origins.
Landscape-Led Palettes That Endure

Decorating with nature’s palette is ever-relevant, rooted in tones that feel collected rather than curated to any one year – rich browns, mossy greens, berry-soft purples and dust-muted pinks that soften rather than shout.
Pure linens such as Elba, known for their tumbled hand, continue to offer a grounding for sofas, curtains and cushions. Timeless schemes lean on layering: deeper base tones balanced with lifted textures rather than relying on pale-vs-pop formulas. Try linen curtains in Moss or Ochre-trimmed leading edges for gentle warmth, a detail that endures beyond eras.
Sustainable Textiles, Responsibly Crafted

Sustainability is no longer an afterthought but the byword for the future of design, and Vivienne Westwood’s famous phrase, ‘Buy less, choose well, make it last’, is just as relevant to home interior design as it is to the world of fashion.
Exploring new ways of recycling is key to a sustainable design industry and an exciting addition to our growing range of eco- friendly fabric offerings is Verde, a chemical-free cotton fabric woven from 80 per cent recycled offcuts from the fashion industry. Available in a comprehensive palette of 46 hues, this double brushed cotton is wonderfully soft on both sides, making it perfect for curtains, loose covers, and upholstery.
We are equally proud of the eco credentials of our Saddle collection of upholstery leather, which uses leather offcuts from shoes and bags that would normally end up in landfill.
Upcycling Furniture for Total Originality

Upcycling offers something trends cannot: total originality. Reinvention now means more than antiques — it includes furniture sourced through collectors’ platforms, maker studios, resale archives and design houses whose silhouettes remain relevant for decades.
Reupholstering with printed velvets, bouclés or natural-fibre weaves gives pieces new intent — heritage renewed, not just refreshed. We reupholstered this Chinoiserie daybed with Close Encounters, a charming 1920s inspired printed velvet that beautifully chimes with the Oriental style of the piece. A trim in dark gold velvet picks up on the lustrous metallics of the fabric.
Comforting Textures Designed for Real Living

Homes should feel welcoming, layered and textural — thoughtfully composed spaces, not dictated by passing design clichés. Tactile fabrics like bouclé, chenille, Italian-milled wool blends and chunky weaves – Sienna – remain eternally relevant because they perform as beautifully as they feel.
Layering textures — sisal, wool, slubby linens — creates harmony that is crafted rather than styled, inviting rather than designed to any one rulebook.
British Sporting Heritage in Interiors

Equestrian wallpapers and heritage sporting scenes remain a decorating mainstay when used with balance. Designs such as Tally Ho!, depicting British sporting folklore, hold cross-channel appeal – homes that honour craft, countryside, humour, history, and artistry without pastiche.
Team with layered antiques or textured natural flooring such as sisal and stone to ground the look. Bring in modernity through proportion, not time-stamps.
Celebrating the Integrity of Natural Materials

Artisan-led interiors focus on integrity: stone, timber, washed linens and responsibly milled wools that are melange-rich and morally mindful. Collections such as the Lana collection (Italian-milled recycled wool, 55+ hues) show how natural cloths bring warmth, structure, acoustic softness and visual sincerity to a home without ever feeling decorative for decoration’s sake.
Painterly Prints That Bring Lasting Movement

Abstracts remain forever relevant when inspired by artistic provenance rather than trend cycles. Printed velvets like Crystal Sunset, nodding to British landscape artistry, and other painterly cloths lend rooms gentle motion, emotional resonance and enduring palette direction without date markers or seasons. Use their tones to direct paint, cushions, drapery and accessories for schemes that feel built, not decorated.
Joyful Colour, Placed With Purpose

Colour has returned — but with maturity. Rather than trend waves, interiors now lean into intentional colour placement: sofas, armchairs, ottomans, window dressings, and accent cushions that shift a room without overwhelming its harmony.
Hard-working velvets such as Moleskin remain eternal enhancers of mood in palettes that range from Sapphire to Coral or Tomato, used not for trend, but for tone-setting and emotional longevity.