Pink is a broad brief. It covers everything from a barely-there blush roller in a minimalist bedroom to a bold Lipstick vertical at a conservatory door. This guide works through six blind types - roller, roman, venetian, vertical, pleated and day and night - and identifies the pick we think is worth considering in each category. We focused on made-to-measure ranges from UK retailers rather than off-the-shelf options, because the colour needs to fit the window properly to look intentional.
What pink actually means in blinds
Pink in window blinds tends to split into three practical registers. The first is neutral pink - blush, powder, rose, mink - which reads as a warm neutral from a distance and sits alongside grey, cream, and natural wood tones without pulling focus. This is the most widely available register and works in most rooms. The second is mid-tone pink - dusty rose, coral, old rose, strawberry - which makes a clearer colour statement without being saturated. The third is vivid pink - lipstick, fuchsia, hot pink - which is genuinely bold and suits accent applications, children's rooms, or deliberate high-contrast interiors.
The distinction matters because many ranges described as "pink" sit solidly in the neutral register and may not read as pink at all in certain lights. Where finishes have names, we've listed them so you can judge for yourself.
What to look for
Fabric opacity and the colour you'll actually see. With pinks more than neutrals, the opacity class affects perceived colour. A blackout backing can shift a blush fabric towards a colder tone because you're seeing the backing through the weave when lit from the front. A light-filtering fabric in the same pink will look warmer and more saturated in daylight. If you're after a specific blush tone, it's worth ordering a sample before committing.
Blind type and room fit. Rollers suit kitchens, bathrooms, and rooms where you want a flat, unfussy look. Romans bring a softer, pleated silhouette when raised and suit living rooms and bedrooms where fabric texture matters. Venetians give precise light control via slat tilt, which is useful in rooms that face direct sun. Verticals are built for wide openings and patio doors. Pleated and perfect-fit options are the neatest fit for UPVC windows, particularly where you want a no-drill solution. Day and night blinds layer a printed design with in-fabric light control.
Finish count and how specific the pink is. Some ranges offer three or four colours, with one being pink-adjacent. Others offer dozens of finishes and several distinct pink options. If the exact shade matters, a range with more finishes gives you better odds of a close match. We've noted finish counts below.
Recess depth for perfect-fit blinds. If you're considering the pleated perfect-fit option, the blind must clip into the rubber seal of a UPVC double-glazed window. The recess needs to be deep enough to accept the frame. Wooden or aluminium windows don't accept the same fitting.
Cord safety. For any window in a child's room, look for cordless or wand-operated options. UK regulations since 2014 require blinds to be sold with cord-safe features, but it's worth confirming the mechanism for each range you consider.
Our picks
Splash Twist Roller
at Swift Direct Blinds
A wide-palette roller from Swift Direct Blinds offering Blush Pink, Lipstick Pink and Rosewood Pink across 35 finishes, starting from £8.36.
Laura Ashley
at Blinds By Post
A Laura Ashley roman collection from Blinds By Post with over 130 finishes including soft blush and antique rose prints, from £20.57.
Turin
at Swift Direct Blinds
A pared-back aluminium venetian from Swift Direct Blinds in 3 finishes, starting from £6.71 - the most affordable route to a venetian with neutral-pink tones.
Bella 127mm
at Blinds By Post
A vertical blind from Blinds By Post with 55 finishes including Lipstick and Tickled, starting from £10.70 - the widest pink-leaning vertical palette we cover.
Mythic Perfect Fit Pleated
at So Easy Blinds
A perfect-fit pleated blind from So Easy Blinds available in Coral, Ecru and Snow Drift - the only pleated pick here and purpose-built for UPVC windows without drilling.
William Morris Duolight Thermal
at Blinds 2go
A William Morris licensed day and night blind from Blinds 2go in 14 prints including Pimpernel Blush, combining a heritage pattern with adjustable light control from £15.80.
Pick details
Splash Twist Roller
at Swift Direct Blinds
A wide-palette roller from Swift Direct Blinds offering Blush Pink, Lipstick Pink and Rosewood Pink across 35 finishes, starting from £8.36.
The Splash Twist Roller from Swift Direct Blinds is the pick for pink rollers because it has three distinct pink finishes - Blush Pink, Lipstick Pink and Rosewood Pink - sitting within a palette of 35 finishes in total. That range means you can compare the pinks against neighbouring neutrals and choose a shade that works with your existing room. Starting from £8.36, it's also accessible enough to try a colour you haven't lived with before.
Rollers are the practical default for most rooms, and the Splash Twist sits in that position. The fabric runs flat against the window when down and rolls onto a tube when up, leaving the full window free. It fits inside or outside the recess, making it flexible for most window configurations. Swift Direct Blinds list it as a made-to-measure range so it cuts to your exact width and drop.
Among the three pink finishes, Blush Pink is the most neutral-reading - closer to a warm off-white in some lights - while Lipstick Pink makes a clear statement and Rosewood Pink sits between the two with a vintage-dusky quality. If you want pink to register as a colour, Rosewood or Lipstick is the more reliable choice; Blush reads differently depending on light direction.
Laura Ashley
at Blinds By Post
A Laura Ashley roman collection from Blinds By Post with over 130 finishes including soft blush and antique rose prints, from £20.57.
The Laura Ashley range stocked by Blinds By Post is the pick for pink romans on the basis of its pattern depth. With over 130 finishes, the range includes printed fabrics in pinks that sit within broader floral and botanical designs - not solid pink fabrics, but patterned ones where pink is the dominant or accent tone. The collection includes the A'hoy Alphabet Blush, which leads with blush pink, alongside prints that combine pink with other colours in a way that roman blinds show well because the fabric folds into visible horizontal pleats.
Roman blinds fold upwards into concertina pleats when raised rather than rolling onto a tube. The folded fabric stays visible at the top when the blind is up, so the pattern matters both when the blind is down and when it's open. A patterned roman in a living room or bedroom contributes to the room even when the blind is raised. That's part of why the Laura Ashley range suits this type - the print quality is visible in the folds.
Price from £20.57 reflects that romans carry more fabric and more construction than rollers. Patterned roman fabrics also tend to be heavier than standard roller polyester, which helps them hang with clean folds and reduces any tendency to sag at the edges.
Turin
at Swift Direct Blinds
A pared-back aluminium venetian from Swift Direct Blinds in 3 finishes, starting from £6.71 - the most affordable route to a venetian with neutral-pink tones.
The Turin venetian from Swift Direct Blinds is the pick for venetians because it covers the neutral end of the spectrum where most venetian buyers are searching. With 3 finishes - 25mm Neutral (premium), 25mm Smoke Grey, and Matt White - it doesn't offer a vivid pink, but it occupies the warm-neutral pink-adjacent register that works alongside pink interiors without competing with them. Starting from £6.71, it's the most affordable entry point among the picks in this guide.
Venetians are the pick when light control is the primary requirement. The slats tilt to admit angled light, filter direct sun, or close fully to block most light through the slat surface. A 25mm aluminium slat is the standard UK specification for venetians - lightweight, moisture-tolerant, and functional in kitchens and bathrooms as well as bedrooms and living rooms.
If you need a venetian that reads strongly as pink rather than neutral-adjacent, this range may not be the right fit. The Turin sits at the restrained end of the palette, and a pairing with pink walls or furniture rather than a specifically pink blind is perhaps more realistic here. That said, the 25mm Neutral finish in particular has a warm blush undertone that distinguishes it from cold grey neutrals.
Bella 127mm
at Blinds By Post
A vertical blind from Blinds By Post with 55 finishes including Lipstick and Tickled, starting from £10.70 - the widest pink-leaning vertical palette we cover.
The Bella from Blinds By Post is the pick for pink verticals because its 55-finish palette includes Lipstick, Tickled, and other finishes in the pink range alongside a full spectrum of neutrals and brights. Starting from £10.70, it sits at the accessible end of the vertical market. Verticals are built for wide openings - typically patio doors or conservatory windows - where a roller or roman would need to be exceptionally wide to cover the span.
Vertical blinds work by hanging fabric vanes from a top track. The vanes rotate to control light angle and slide along the track to open the blind. For large glazed areas, this mechanism is more practical than rolling or folding because the vanes move independently rather than the whole blind stacking. The Bella operates in the standard way with 89mm vanes and chain-linked weights at the base to stop the vanes swinging in draughts.
The Lipstick finish is vivid and direct - consistent with the same name in the Splash Twist Roller range - while Tickled is softer and closer to a mid-tone pink. With 55 finishes in total, the Bella gives enough choice that you can pick a pink that sits in context with the other finishes in the range, which helps when you need the vanes to work alongside flooring, furniture, or curtain panels.
Mythic Perfect Fit Pleated
at So Easy Blinds
A perfect-fit pleated blind from So Easy Blinds available in Coral, Ecru and Snow Drift - the only pleated pick here and purpose-built for UPVC windows without drilling.
The Mythic Perfect Fit Pleated Blind from So Easy Blinds is the pick for pleated blinds and the only no-drill option in this guide. Perfect-fit frames clip into the rubber seal of a UPVC double-glazed window, mounting entirely within the window's own frame with no drilling into walls or frames. For renters or anyone reluctant to make permanent fixings, that's a meaningful advantage.
The range offers 3 finishes: Coral, Ecru, and Snow Drift. Coral is the pink pick here - a warm, mid-tone coral-pink that sits firmly in the pink register rather than the blush neutral zone. Ecru and Snow Drift are neutrals. Starting from £128.54, this is the most expensive range in this guide, which reflects both the perfect-fit frame and the pleated construction.
Pleated blinds fold accordion-style when raised and stack compactly at the top of the window. The fabric choice is typically lighter than roman fabrics and the look is tailored rather than draped. The perfect-fit mounting means there's no visible headrail above or below the blind - the frame sits flush with the window's rubber gasket and the blind fills the aperture cleanly.
William Morris Duolight Thermal
at Blinds 2go
A William Morris licensed day and night blind from Blinds 2go in 14 prints including Pimpernel Blush, combining a heritage pattern with adjustable light control from £15.80.
The William Morris Duolight Thermal Blind from Blinds 2go is the pick for day and night blinds because it applies a recognised printed fabric design to a construction type that most day and night ranges leave plain. The Pimpernel Blush finish is the pink option here - a William Morris Pimpernel print in blush pink tones that gives the blind a character absent from plain stripe-format day and night blinds.
Day and night blinds use two layers of alternating sheer and opaque horizontal stripes. When the stripes align, the blind is in its most open position; when staggered, the sheer and opaque stripes alternate, providing privacy without full closure. The Duolight construction adds a thermal backing, which gives modest insulation beyond a standard roller or day and night fabric.
At £15.80 from price, the William Morris Duolight sits at the lower end of the picks in this guide despite its pattern pedigree. The 14 finishes in the range cover a range of tones including several blues, a teal, yellow, and red alongside the Pimpernel Blush - so if you want a different William Morris colourway at the same window later, the range supports it. The day and night mechanism suits living rooms and home offices more than bedrooms where genuine blackout is needed; the staggered stripe position provides privacy but not full darkness.
What this guide doesn't cover
This guide focuses on standard fabric blinds in the pink palette - rollers, romans, venetians, verticals, pleated, and day and night - available made-to-measure from UK retailers. It doesn't include plantation shutters, which are a fixed installation in a different price bracket and a different product category. It also doesn't include motorised or smart blinds; the step-up in cost puts them in a separate buying decision and the colour argument is the same regardless of how the blind operates.
We've focused on broad fabric ranges with pink finishes rather than specialist children's ranges with character prints in pink. Character print blinds exist in significant variety but the buying decision is primarily driven by the character rather than the blind type, and they sit more naturally in a children's blinds context. The picks here are for rooms where the design choice is pink as a colour rather than pink as a character licence.
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