The Lilith is a made-to-measure roman blind sold by Blinds 2go, available in 10 colours that span a restrained, liveable palette running from cool blue-greens through warm blush and russet tones to earthy yellows. From-prices start at £18.86, putting it at the accessible end of the Blinds 2go roman range. The fabric is not described as blackout, so the Lilith sits in the decorative and light-filtering end of the market rather than the privacy-first end.
Who it suits
Roman blinds fold into horizontal pleats as they raise, giving a softer, more structured look than a roller. The Lilith's palette - muted, naturalistic, without a stark white or a deep charcoal - points clearly towards living rooms and dining areas where the blind is meant to be noticed without dominating. Sage, Mist, Thyme, and Aegean all read as gentle neutrals or near-neutrals that would settle quietly into a room without demanding a repaint.
For bedrooms the picture is mixed. Roman blinds at this opacity level allow light through, which suits adults who wake naturally and need some privacy rather than full darkness. If you need genuine blackout - for young children, shift workers, or a room that faces east - a lined blackout roman or a roller with a true blackout fabric would be the more reliable choice. The Lilith is not the blind to reach for if darkness is the primary need.
Bathrooms and kitchens are generally not well suited to fabric roman blinds; the pleated structure traps moisture and can be harder to wipe clean than a roller or a faux-wood venetian. Stick to dry rooms.
The colours
10 colours available
The ten colours split into two loose groups. The cooler end - Aegean, Peppermint, Aqua, Mist, and Sage - covers teal-adjacent and grey-green tones that work well alongside timber floors and white or pale-grey walls. The warmer end - Blush, Russet, Mulberry, Gold, and Thyme - leans towards the earthy and botanical; Russet and Mulberry introduce some depth for rooms that can take a richer tone.
None of the names suggest a strong pattern or print; these read as plain or near-plain fabrics where the weave texture and colour are the entire story. That makes them versatile across contemporary, Scandi, and country-style interiors without any of them looking distinctly like any single style.
Price by your dimensions
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Starting from £18.86, the Lilith sits at an accessible price point for a made-to-measure roman blind. As with all made-to-measure pricing, the cost rises with width and drop - the widget above shows how the price scales for your specific window dimensions. Roman blinds generally cost more than rollers at the same size, and the Lilith's entry price reflects a standard fabric roman rather than a lined or interlined version.
How it compares
Against other roman blinds in this category, the Lilith's principal virtue is range: ten colours at one price tier gives you a reasonable chance of finding a match without paying a premium for a specific tone. The palette is more considered than a purely commercial range but less expressive than a printed or textured designer collection.
If your room needs thermal performance, a roman with a thermal interlining or a honeycomb blind would do more work. If you need blackout, a blackout-lined roman or a roller with a true blackout coating is a cleaner solution. The Lilith is most at home where fabric texture and colour matching are the criteria - and where the gentle, light-diffusing quality of a roman blind is actually what you want rather than a compromise.
A note on care
Like most polyester-based roman fabrics, the Lilith will benefit from a light vacuum with a brush attachment to remove dust from the pleats. Spot-clean marks with a damp cloth and mild soap rather than soaking the fabric. The pleated structure of a roman blind is less forgiving of heavy soiling than a roller, so a living area or bedroom - away from cooking splatter - is the appropriate environment.