The Hayworth roller blind is a made-to-measure fabric roller sold exclusively by Blinds By Post, available in 11 colourways starting from £58.00. The palette sits firmly in the muted and neutral territory - earthy beiges, blue-greys, and blue-navy tones - which makes it well suited to rooms where you want the blind to recede rather than compete with the decor.
Who it suits
The Hayworth is a sensible choice for living rooms and home offices where a light-filtering or dimout fabric keeps the room comfortable without blocking every ray. A roller blind at this price and opacity level lets you keep daytime visibility while still giving the window a clean, dressed look. The neutral palette - beiges, greys, and heritage tones - sits naturally in kitchens, too, where a wipe-clean approach and a colour that hides marks matter more than drama.
If you need genuine blackout for a bedroom, check the fabric's opacity specification directly with Blinds By Post before ordering; the range listing does not confirm a blackout classification, so the retailer's product page is the right place to verify. Blackout rollers with a foam or acrylic triple-pass backing are a distinct product type, and this range's earthy, design-led palette suggests it is intended more for living areas than sleep rooms.
For a bathroom, confirm whether the fabric carries a moisture-resistant backing before fitting. Standard polyester roller fabrics can tolerate light condensation but are not designed for wet-room conditions. If moisture resistance is essential, a PVC-backed roller or an aluminium venetian would be the safer choice.
The colours
11 colours available
The eleven finishes split broadly into three families. The warm neutrals - Warmth, Honey, and Heritage - sit at the biscuit and ochre end, well matched to timber floors and off-white walls. The cool greys and blue-greys - Mist, Shadow, Whisper, and Empire - are the more versatile group; they read as architectural rather than colourful and will co-ordinate across most modern interiors. The sharper tones - Fern (a green-grey), Sky (a soft blue), Harmony (likely a mid-tone), and Midnight (a deep navy or near-black) - give the range more range than its beige-heavy category tags suggest.
All eleven share the same naming style: short, mood-evocative words rather than descriptive colour names. That is either convenient or frustrating depending on how precisely you need to match a shade; the variant grid above shows swatches so you can judge tone directly. The range avoids pattern entirely - every finish is a plain, flat-weave colour - which means it pairs cleanly with patterned wallpaper or textured upholstery without fighting for attention.
Price by your dimensions
Enter your window size. We round up to the next standard size, which matches how the retailer actually quotes you.
With a from-price under £15, the Hayworth sits at the entry-level end of the made-to-measure roller market. As with any roller blind priced at this level, the cost per blind rises with width and drop, so larger windows will cost proportionally more - the grid above gives the full picture by size. At the smaller end of the size range this is a competitive price point for a fabric roller.
How it compares
Against other entry-level roller blinds, the Hayworth's main distinction is its palette breadth: eleven co-ordinated finishes at a consistent price point, which makes it practical to dress a whole room in matching tones without mixing suppliers. Ranges at a similar price from other retailers often offer more finishes overall, but the Hayworth's palette has a more deliberate, considered feel - fewer primary or saturated colours, more liveable mid-tones.
If blackout is the primary requirement, look at roller ranges that explicitly list a blackout lining rather than assuming this fabric qualifies. Equally, if thermal performance matters - for a conservatory or a poorly insulated window - a cellular or pleated blind will outperform any single-layer roller fabric, including this one. Within its lane, though, the Hayworth makes a straightforward case: neutral colours, a manageable price, and one retailer to deal with.
Likely the same fabric, at other retailers
Hayworth roller blinds are sold under the same name by more than one UK retailer, and the price scales identically across window sizes - a strong sign it is the same fabric from the same supplier:
- Swift Direct Blinds from £10.75
- Blinds By Post this page from £58.00
- So Easy Blinds from £68.15
We match these on the shared name and an identical price curve, not an independent inspection, so treat it as likely the same fabric rather than confirmed - and check the specification and colour at each retailer before buying.