The Light range is a set of roller blinds for Velux roof windows, sold by So Easy Blinds across 8 variants and starting from £104.64. What makes this range distinctive is the split between standard and blackout variants within the same colour families: blue, taupe, and rose are each available in a standard (light-filtering) version and a blackout version, giving buyers a clear choice between daytime softening and genuine darkness without switching to a different range entirely. All variants are made to fit Velux window frames specifically.

Who it suits

Velux roof windows sit above eye level, face the sky directly, and funnel daylight straight into a room - which is why roof window blinds are so commonly sought for bedrooms, loft conversions, and attic studies. The blackout variants in this range suit anyone who needs darkness for sleeping: the fabric blocks light transmission through the panel, which is the primary challenge in a loft bedroom where a bright summer sky is visible overhead for much of the night.

The standard (non-blackout) variants suit spaces where some light control is wanted but darkness is not - a home office under a Velux where you want to reduce glare from a bright sky without making the room feel enclosed, or a bathroom where privacy matters but natural light is an asset.

As with all roof window blinds, this range is designed for Velux frames specifically. It will not fit Keylite, Fakro, or other brands' windows without the correct fitting hardware.

The colours

8 colours available

Light Blue (4576) (Blackout) Velux Blackout Roller Blinds
Blue 4576 Blackout Velux Blackout from £104.64
Light Blue (4166) Velux Roller Blinds
Blue 4166 Velux from £104.64
Light Taupe (4580) (Blackout) Velux Blackout Roller Blinds
Taupe 4580 Blackout Velux Blackout from £104.64
Light Taupe (4169) Velux Roller Blinds
Taupe 4169 Velux from £104.64
Light Rose (4578) (Blackout) Velux Blackout Roller Blinds
Rose 4578 Blackout Velux Blackout from £104.64
Light Beige (1283) Velux Pleated Blinds
Beige 1283 Velux from £120.34
Light Blue / White (4576 / 1016) Velux Duo Blinds
Blue White 4576 1016 Velux Duo from £133.42
Light Taupe / White (4580 / 1016) Velux Duo Blinds
Taupe White 4580 1016 Velux Duo from £133.42

The colour range is deliberately narrow - five variants across three base colours. Blue (available as standard 4166 and blackout 4576), taupe (standard 4169 and blackout 4580), and rose (blackout 4578 only). The naming convention uses Velux's own colour codes alongside the descriptive name, which helps when cross-referencing with Velux's own range or confirming you have the correct replacement.

Taupe is the most neutral of the three, sitting comfortably in most loft rooms. Blue is a cool mid-tone. Rose introduces a warmer note and is currently available only in the blackout version. The limited palette reflects the specialist nature of the range - this is a fitting-focused product, and colour choice is secondary to getting the right Velux size and fabric type.

Price by your dimensions

Made to measure from £104.64. Check So Easy Blinds for the price at your exact window size.

At a from-price of £104.64, the Light range sits in the mid-to-upper bracket for Velux blinds. Velux windows are sold in a set of standard sizes, and prices vary by size - the from-price reflects the smallest sizes in the range. Confirm your Velux window type code (usually printed on the frame) with So Easy Blinds before ordering to ensure the correct fit.

How it compares

Within Velux-compatible blinds, the main choice is between fabric types rather than brand. This range's dual standard-and-blackout offering within the same colour families is useful if different rooms in your house have the same window size but different light-control requirements - you can keep a consistent colour across a loft conversion while varying the opacity by room.

For buyers who want thermal performance as well as light control - particularly relevant in south-facing loft rooms that overheat in summer - a cellular or pleated Velux blind with a thermal backing will outperform a standard roller blind on insulation. The Light range does not appear to claim thermal performance beyond the blackout fabric itself, so if summer heat is the driving concern, a dedicated thermal blind may be worth considering alongside.