Disney blinds sit in an odd corner of the made-to-measure market: enormous demand, surprisingly few genuine made-to-measure sources. Most character blinds online are ready-made panels in fixed sizes, so a licensed print cut to your exact window is rarer than the search results suggest. This guide covers the Disney designs we track as true made-to-measure blinds - Mickey, Minnie, Winnie the Pooh, Frozen, Toy Story and company - with the retailers selling each and what they charge.

Disney blinds are sold by 2 UK retailers we track, from £14.98, as roller blinds. The same named designs turn up across these shops at near-identical prices - a strong sign it is the same licensed cloth - so the choice comes down to price, construction and fitting rather than the fabric itself.

The thing worth knowing before you buy

Character blinds are licensed artwork, and the licence works differently from the heritage designers we cover elsewhere. Where a William Morris print is the same cloth whichever shop sells it, Disney designs are commissioned per product line - so the same character can appear in different artwork, scale and colouring at different retailers. The character is your starting point, but the specific print is the real decision: a toile-style Winnie the Pooh is a different room from a bold Mickey graphic, even before you pick a colourway.

The other thing to hold onto is the lifespan question. Children outgrow characters faster than blinds wear out, so the prints that last are the ones drawn softly enough to survive the transition - illustrated styles over logo-heavy graphics. It is also worth ordering the blind in the room's palette rather than the franchise's: most of these designs come in several colourways precisely so the blind can match the walls first and the film second.

Mickey

The broadest made-to-measure Disney print, sold across roller and roman in a palette wide enough to treat it like any other fabric - blues, greys, warm neutrals and brighter accents rather than one fixed look. Drawn as a repeating illustrated pattern, it reads as wallpaper-like decoration at the window, which is what lets it work in a room that is not otherwise themed.

Winnie The Pooh

The nursery classic. The Hundred Acre Wood prints come in soft illustrated colourways - toile blues, forest greens, honey and buttermilk tones - and a pom-pom-trimmed edition for a more decorated finish. Of all the character prints, this is the one that most reads as proper nursery decoration, and it ages gracefully from a baby's room into early childhood.

Frozen

The film licence handled gently: a soft rose palette rather than the saturated merchandise look, which makes it liveable in a bedroom that will change its mind in a few years. A pom-pom edition exists here too for a softer, more finished lower edge.

The rest of the collection

The other Disney designs we see made to measure - Minnie, Toy Story, Cinderella and whatever the licence adds next - each with the retailers carrying them:

How to choose between them

Start with the room's job, not the character. For a nursery, the illustrated prints - Winnie the Pooh above all - give you gentleness and a design that outlasts the licence's novelty. For a child old enough to have opinions, Mickey and Minnie carry the most colourway choice, so the room's scheme can lead. Then think about sleep: character prints rarely come with heavy blackout as standard, so check the fabric's opacity and be ready to pair the blind with blackout curtains or a second roller behind it - our Disney character picks and the wider children's character guide both weigh the sleep question pick by pick. And in any child's room, specify cordless or cord-safe operation in line with UK safety requirements when you order - the option is standard practice in the trade, but ticking the box is your job.

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