Velvet has a quality that most fabrics don't. It catches the light differently depending on how you sit, how the room is lit, what time of day it is. Smooth and directional, it reads as considered rather than casual, which makes it as well suited to a bedroom as it is to a living room. Available across sofas, accent chairs, beds, footstools, and dining chairs, in colours that range from quiet neutrals to deeper, richer tones.
It works particularly well layered alongside bouclé or linen, the contrast between textures is where the room starts to feel intentional rather than coordinated. We've written about how the two fabrics differ and how to use both.
Velvet
Velvet has a quality that most fabrics don't. It catches the light differently depending on how you sit, how the room is lit, what time of day it is. Smooth and directional, it reads as considered rather than casual, which makes it as well suited to a bedroom as it is to a living room. Available across sofas, accent chairs, beds, footstools, and dining chairs, in colours that range from quiet neutrals to deeper, richer tones.
It works particularly well layered alongside bouclé or linen, the contrast between textures is where the room starts to feel intentional rather than coordinated. We've written about how the two fabrics differ and how to use both.
Velvet has a quality that most fabrics don't. It catches the light differently depending on how you sit, how the room is lit, what time of day it is. Smooth and directional, it reads as considered rather than casual, which makes it as well suited to a bedroom as it is to a living room. Available across sofas, accent chairs, beds, footstools, and dining chairs, in colours that range from quiet neutrals to deeper, richer tones.
It works particularly well layered alongside bouclé or linen, the contrast between textures is where the room starts to feel intentional rather than coordinated. We've written about how the two fabrics differ and how to use both.
Velvet
Velvet has a quality that most fabrics don't. It catches the light differently depending on how you sit, how the room is lit, what time of day it is. Smooth and directional, it reads as considered rather than casual, which makes it as well suited to a bedroom as it is to a living room. Availab...
Velvet has a quality that most fabrics don't. It catches the light differently depending on how you sit, how the room is lit, what time of day it is. Smooth and directional, it reads as considered rather than casual, which makes it as well suited to a bedroom as it is to a living room. Available across sofas, accent chairs, beds, footstools, and dining chairs, in colours that range from quiet neutrals to deeper, richer tones.
It works particularly well layered alongside bouclé or linen, the contrast between textures is where the room starts to feel intentional rather than coordinated. We've written about how the two fabrics differ and how to use both.
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