4 Ways to Style Willow

Living room with blue walls and a gallery wall styled with two upholstered pink embroidered chairs with a small dog sitting in front

Our Willow fabric, a gorgeous mix of chenille and woven jacquard, comes in three different colorways: mint, orchid, and amalfi. No matter your home’s color scheme, you can join in on the fun that is this luxe geometric fabric. Below, interior designers share their favorite ways to style Willow all throughout the house.

 

Make a Statement in the Bar Area with Willow Mint

If you have a walk-in bar closet in your home, why not create a moody atmosphere using Willow Mint? Amy Munger, the co-founder of Munger Interiors, suggests using the fabric to create a roman shade, complete with a charming sage trim.

chenille and woven jacquard mint green geometric fabric swatch

Then, she recommends covering the ceiling using the Thatcher Forest clay coated wallpaper. When it comes to hardware and lighting, Munger is partial to brass. “Using brass accents will complement the overall sophisticated palette, creating a stylish, warm, and inviting space,” she says.

 

Jazz up the Foot of a Bed with Willow Amalfi

If your bedroom could use a dose of color, consider upholstering an end of bed parsons bench using Willow Amalfi. “If someone has more of a neutral bed with white bedding, it would be a great way to add color and interest when a bold print feels like too much,” says Marya Karlton, the founder of Karlton Kelly. If you’d like, you could also make a lumbar pillow using the fabric, Karlton suggests. She recommends opting for a contrasting piping, too. “It would look great with the coordinating orchid solid for those that like to play it safe, or with a contrasting color like citron for a little extra zing,” the designer says.

blue grey pillow with green piping and a woven blue chenille jacquard pillow with blue fringe sitting on a green window bench with stuffed animals in front of the pillows

 

Create a Cute Kid’s Room with Willow Orchid

Samantha Voges, the founder of Samantha Voges Design, envisions making drapery out of Willow Orchid to use in a little girl’s bedroom. “Its small scale pattern adds just enough interest without being overwhelming,” she says. She imagines it paired with Sea Salt Sisal grasscloth wallpaper. “The pink, citron, and cool green color pairing inject an element of fun, while both materials are sophisticated enough to have staying power.”

Moodboard with pink and citron embroidered curtains paired with sea salt solid grasscloth wallpaper

Another way to use this fabric in a girl’s room is to use it to make custom twin headboards, as Danielle Balanis, the founder of Danielle Balanis Design, suggests. “ I would top these headboards with a crown made of the same fabric with a scallop edge,” she says, noting that she would do the same for the bedskirt and add a coordinating bolster pillow to the top of each bed. “It would create an overall swathed look where the bed, headboard, and crown feel like one complete unit and the repetition of pattern and material make the overall appearance more powerful and striking,” Balanis notes.

 

Transform a Banquette

Emily Mangus, the founder of Emily Mangus Interiors, imagines using Willow Amalfi on the back of a banquette, pairing it with a moody green leather seat. She would keep the rich look going by weaving in a walnut dining table as well.

Katie Hilburn, the founder of Katie Hilburn Interiors, recently used Willow Mint on a banquette bench, pairing it with a citron velvet piping. “When using patterns like this, I love to pull a contrasting color to use in nearby upholstery or even as a color drenching moment, using paint to tie in the pattern and colorways,” she says.

sage green kitchen bench with chenille and woven jacquard mint green geometric, pink, and teal pillows on it with floral artwork hung on the walls above it and a multicolored table

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