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Floral

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  • Arils Garden Fabric

    £85.00 /m
    blue-claypink
    indigored
    olivemulberry
    tealrusset

    Named after a pomegranate’s delicious jewel-coloured treasures and painted in a style reminiscent of indiennes  our trailing garden design features stylised flowers  a friendly grasshopper  beetles and a crested tit.

    Available in four colourways: Indigo/Red  Blue Clay/Pink  Olive/Mulberry and Teal/Russet

  • Bluebell Fabric

    £119.00 /m
    indigorose
    leaf-greensweet-briar
    leafy-arbour

    Perhaps one of the most endearing qualities of William Morris was his love for ordinary flowers  native to the UK. Bluebell is an 1876 design that takes as its subject the charming  but common  bluebell flower. Morris’s design is a richly packed symmetrical arrangement and continues his tradition of naming the design after the secondary flower. Framed by bold acanthus leaves and entwined by larger foliage  the humble bluebell weaves this design together like it does the forest floor in spring.

    Available in three colourways: Leafy Arbour  Indigo/Rose and Leaf Green/Sweet Briar

  • Borage Fabric

    £89.00 /m
    barbed-berry
    indigo
    sunflower

    Morris & Co. are thrilled to re-introduce Borage  an 1883 design by William Morris. Originally conceived as a furnishing fabric  Borage’s spirited floral pattern and multiple axes of symmetry bring a lively point of visual interest to any furniture item. Beloved by bees and other pollinators  Borage is a perfect example of William Morris drawing ideas about ornamenting interiors from the natural world.

    Borage re-enters the Morris & Co. range due to the collaboration collection with Emery Walker’s House  the historic home of noted typographer and close friend of William Morris. Walker  dutiful to the design ideas of his friend William Morris  has used Borage as a furnishing fabric in his drawing room to great effect.

    Available in three colourways: Sunflower  Indigo (loyal to Emery’s original) and Barbed Berry

  • Bower Fabric

    £119.00 /m
    barbed-berryindigo
    herballweld
    indigo

    The definition of a bower  a pleasant  shady place under trees or climbing plants in a garden or forest  aptly describes this upliftingly rich design. Registered as a William Morris pattern in 1877  Bower depicts a floral wonderland of foliage and flowers ripe with life. The Bough’s Green/Rose colourway is the closest to the joyous original  whilst Indigo and Barbed Berry/Indigo offer moodier and cooler hues respectively with Herball/Weld being a happy mid-tone.

    Available in four colourways: Bough’s Green-Rose  Herball/Weld  Indigo and Barbed Berry/Indigo

  • Chrysanthemum Fabric

    £115.00 /m
    indigobayleaf
    mineralcream
    russet

    Originally an 1877 William Morris wallpaper design, Chrysanthemum is translated onto a durable indoor-outdoor fabric for the first time. Combining beauty with practicality, this incredibly ornate design is available in three distinct colour stories. Made fit for busy homes, gardens, patios and poolsides, this fabric is imbued with UV and water resistance, a wipeable finish, anti-microbial and colourfast properties. Available in three colourways: Indigo/Bayleaf, Russet, Mineral/Cream.

  • Compton Fabric

    £119.00 /m
    spring
    summer-yellow

    Just like a rekindled love affair  Ben discovered this iconic print stowed away in our archive. Instantly mesmerised  he recoloured and updated Compton to include cheerful daffodil yellows and vibrant pops of indigo blue  poppy red and sunset orange.

    Designed by John Henry Dearle in 1895  especially for Compton Hall in Wolverhampton  the original pattern required two sets of woodblocks to print all 28 colours. Available in two colourways: Spring and Gorse Yellow.

  • Daffodil Fabric

    £145.00 /m
    cove-bluechocolate
    pinkleaf-green

    Ben Pentreath has taken the distinctive daffodils that grace this 1891 John Henry Dearle design and pumped up the colour! Scaled down slightly  the Pink/Leaf Green colourway reinterprets a magical  wildflower meadow and Cove Blue/Chocolate captures the freshness of a clear springtime sky.

    Available in two colourways: Pink/Leaf Green and Cove Blue/Chocolate

  • Dallimore Fabric

    £79.00 /m
    fawn-multi
    indigomulti
    inkwoodmulti
    mulberry-multi

    This beautiful archival floral trail of rambling woodland flowers is named after Kent’s Dallimore Valley. Coloured to sit across the entire Sanderson Arboretum collection  intricate dot detail harks back to the design’s block printed origins.

    Available in four colourways: Indigo/Multi  Fawn/Multi  Inkwood/Multi and Mulberry/Multi

  • Enys Garden Fabric

    £85.00 /m
    blushjade
    indigored
    rose-leaf

    This finely detailed trail of stylised flowers is faithfully reinterpreted from an archive document. Meaning ‘forest clearing’ in Celtic  it’s named after the gardens at Enys  one of the earliest and most progressive in Cornwall. A pretty  well-spaced design  see if you can spot our charming grasshopper in his countryside home.

    Available in three colourways: Blush/Jade  Rose Leaf and Indigo/Primrose

  • Florent Fabric

    £85.00 /m
    hempseedlagoonrosehip
    positanomaplegraphite
    sail-clothcelestialclay
    seaglasscloverrosehip

    Sharing a well-balanced  nostalgic feel  Florent is a painterly cotton/linen adorned with intricately detailed and richly coloured floral layers. A real softness runs throughout  created by a gentle flow that extends to the design’s matching wallpaper.

    Available in four colourways: Hempseed/Lagoon/Rosehip  Sail Cloth/Celestial/Clay  Positano/Maple/Graphite and Seaglass/Clover/Rosehip

  • Golden Lily Velvet Fabric

    £140.00 /m
    apatite

    Golden Lily Velvet Fabric designed by House of Hackney. Transcend time with William Morris’ GOLDEN LILY reimagined in vibrant ‘Apatite’ British velvet. Reminiscent of Tudor days gone by, briar leaves and lily stems entwine in this timeless design, first created by our design muse in the 1890s and now resplendent against a contemporary backdrop of black with verdant green leaves and red, pink and orange climbing flowers. Our British velvets are made from the finest quality cotton and traditionally crafted on a loom to create a lavishly soft-to-the-touch finish that’s resilient to everyday wear and tear, and great for upholstery, curtains and accessories – perfect for helping create the interior of your dreams.

  • Honeysuckle Fabric

    £115.00 /m
    sageclay
    tealsoft-lemon

    The sweet scent of honeysuckle must be one of nature’s greatest ‘simple’ pleasures. Immortalised by May Morris, William Morris’s daughter, in this 1883 design, Honeysuckle is a flowing, complex pattern that mimics the plant’s tendency to climb and bind. Made fit for busy homes, gardens, patios and poolsides, this fabric is imbued with UV and water resistance, a wipeable finish, anti-microbial and colourfast properties. Available in two colourways: Sage/Clay and Teal/Soft Lemon.

  • Kalina Fabric

    £75.00 /m
    celestialmurmurationawakening
    parchmentforestazalea

    Harlequin’s take on a botanical drawing  our bouquet of finely illustrated wild orchids create this tranquil scene. Zesty colours  contrast on soft grounds  allowing the flowers to stand off beautifully.

    Available in two colourways: Celestial/Murmuration/Awakening and Parchment/Forest/Azalea

  • Marigold Fabric

    £115.00 /m
    indigo
    mineral-blue
    russet
    soft-teal
    wheat

    Originally imagined as a furnishing fabric, Marigold is an 1875 William Morris design filled with charm and energy. Marigold’s complex pattern, swirling movement and five available colourways make it perfect for all upholstery uses in any part of the home, inside or out. Made fit for busy homes, gardens, patios and poolsides, this fabric is imbued with UV and water resistance, a wipeable finish, anti-microbial and colourfast properties. Available in five colourways: Mineral Blue, Wheat, Russet, Indigo and Soft Teal.

  • Rose & Thistle Fabric

    £99.00 /m
    indigo

    Re-entering the Morris & Co. range for the first time in many years  Rose & Thistle is arranged in a graceful meandering structure with alternating rose flowerheads. Set amongst the foliage  small blooming thistles give this 1881 design an unmistakable character and wild charm. The deep indigo ground offers an almost sculptural quality to this furnishing fabric.

    Morris & Co. are thrilled to re-introduce Rose & Thistle to the Morris & Co. portfolio for the Emery Walker’s House collection.

    Available in one colourway: Indigo

  • Rose Fabric

    £119.00 /m
    weldleaf-green

    Rose is a gorgeously layered design with sumptuous rearing tulip and rose heads and dramatic thorned stems. William Morris’s close observation of nature’s everyday dramas is evidenced here in the pair of cheerful birds that play among the thicket.

    Originally designed by Morris as a furnishing fabric in 1883  Rose was widely used in the drawing room of Sir Emery Walker  the noted typographer and friend of Morris. Rose re-enters the Morris & Co. range for the first time in many years exclusively for the Emery Walker’s House collection.

    Available in two colourways: Weld/Leaf Green and Bough’s Green/Rose (loyal to Emery’s original)

  • Trent Fabric

    £119.00 /m
    red-house
    woad-blue

    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.

    Available in three colourways: Madder/Webb’s Blue  Red House and Woad Blue

  • Woodland Weeds Fabric

    £129.00 /m
    orangeturquoise
    sap-green

    Depicting ‘millefluers’ or many different small flowers and plants  Woodland Weeds is one of Ben’s favourite designs. Often shown on a green ground  as though growing in grass  the pattern is attributed to John Henry Dearle. First printed in 1905  this archive document is unusually symmetrical and perpendicular for a Morris & Co. design.

    Available in two colourways: Sap Green and Orange/Turquoise

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