All Fabric By the Yard
Special Offers
Shop by Color
Customer Rating
Style
Brand
Morris & Co.
Psychedelia meets a signature Morris & Co. botanical evoking the brand`s trippy color experiments from the swinging `60s. Ensnaring and intoxicating the swirling rhythm and hidden depths of William Morris`s 1876 Pimpernel have an irresistibly mythic pull. All tendrils and flowerheads Pimpernel is a perfect exemplification of Morris`s layering technique adding texture and drama at every twist and turn.
Reduced in scale for enhanced usability Willow Boughs Minor features the 1887 William Morris classic in a smaller more intricate feel. Willow Boughs Minor is available in five naturalistic colourways perfect for upholstery or accent pieces.
Adapted from the border of a carpet designed by Morris between 1881 and 1885 the Morris & Co. design studio has reworked the border as a modern fresh stripe with a classic Arts & Crafts touch. Redcar carpet is one of the largest known surviving examples of a Morris carpet with the Hammersmith mark. Inspired by traditional Chinese examples the scheme was originally woven with pastel colours on a camel-coloured ground.
Pomegranates and Indian-inspired motifs cover this small-scale fabric design. Available in versatile colourways Little Chintz is an excellent way to introduce Morris & Co.`s design into smaller rooms in upholstery or curtains. Printed on a linen-mix cloth in fresh characterful colourways.
A simple two-toned design Yew & Aril is a seamless choice as a coordinate fabric. An excellent colour carrier Alan Francis Vigers`s small-scale design depicts the quiet beauty of the branches of a Yew tree and its charming berries known as arils.
For Morris, the tapestry was the highest form of decorative art. Inspired in part by J. H. Dearle’s The Brook Tapestry and the friezes that sit beneath the Holy Grail Tapestries, this digitally printed fabric design recreates the crispness and beautiful detail of medieval tapestries. One colorway is printed on cotton velvet and two on textured cloth reminiscent of original tapestry surfaces. Also available as a wide-width wallpaper.
Kelmscott Tree is a new design by Alison Gee. Inspired by Morris's bed curtains at his home Kelmscott Manor which was embroidered by May Morris in 1891 Kelmscott Tree has been painted in the Morris studio and adapted into a beautiful embroidery of trees birds and flowers.
Trent, which began life in 1888 with the grand accolade of being Morris & Co.'s most expensive printed textile, is a rich, vibrant floral display. This luscious pattern features curving tulips and meandering acanthus leaves amongst other stalwarts of English gardens. Trent seamlessly imagines two of William Morris's guiding design principles, ensnare the eye with sprawling repeats and beguile with masterfully rendered motifs.
Paired birds alternate between perched and in-flight in this serene 1878 tapestry design from William Morris. Surprising bursts of color emerge upon closer inspection, pulling the eye towards the original hand-driven jacquard loom production quality. William Morris designed a bird in 1878 to adorn the walls of his drawing room in Kelmscott House. His friend and neighbor, the noted typographer Sir Emery Walker, adorned his dining room with an identical bird tapestry after receiving an inheritance from either Morris or Philip Webb, the famous arts and crafts architect. Our modern bird tapestry retains William Morris's high regard for craftsmanship, being woven by Morris & Co. craftspeople right here in the UK using a cotton-wool blend.
Originally a best-selling carpet design this mixed-chenille jacquard fabric features a small-scale interlocking floral motif making it an extremely versatile pattern for upholstery and curtains. Enjoy a sumptuously textured surface adding a tactile layer to any room scheme.
William Morris`s 1876 design Pimpernel swirls tendrils bowed in the wind. Still beloved today for its virile energy and tender floral form it was the design of choice for William Morris himself when decorating his dining room in Kelmscott Manor Oxfordshire.
Three brand-new colourways with warming botanical base tones transform Kate Faulkner`s 1879 design into an ideal fabric solution for contemporary upholstery. Faulkner a talented designer in her own right was the sister of Charlie Faulkner one of the founding members of Morris Marshall Faulkner & Co. (later known as simply `Morris & Co.`) in 1861.
Loading...