Polaris from So Easy Blinds is a large, coherent roller range offered in both blackout and light-filtering fabrics, with 40 options from £35.00. The same colour palette runs across both fabric types, so you can pick a shade and then choose whether you want it to block light or filter it - room by room, in a consistent look. It is a range built for fitting out a whole home in one family of colours.
Who it suits
Anywhere you want a coherent roller across several rooms. The blackout fabrics suit bedrooms and nurseries where darkness matters; the light-filtering versions suit living rooms, kitchens and studies where you want privacy and softened daylight rather than a dark room. Because the colours match across both, a house fitted in Polaris keeps a consistent look while each blind does the right job for its room - the blackout in the bedroom and the light-filtering in the lounge can be the same shade.
The palette is broad enough to match most schemes, with the blackout colourways carrying a premium over the light-filtering ones. So Easy Blinds positions Polaris a step above the budget rollers, so it sits at a higher entry price than basic plain ranges - you are paying for the choice of fabric behaviour and the consistent palette.
As a roller, there is no slat-angle control, and for a wet room you would want to confirm the specific fabric's suitability.
The colours
40 colours available
The palette is extensive and runs the full neutral range - Black, Midnight, Graphite, Oyster and many more - each typically available as both a blackout and a light-filtering fabric, with the blackout versions priced higher. The neutrals dominate, which fits the range's role as a coherent whole-home option, with some softer and brighter accents among them. When choosing, the key decision is fabric behaviour first (blackout or light-filtering for the room), then the shade.
Price by your dimensions
Enter your window size. We round up to the next standard size, which matches how the retailer actually quotes you.
At £35.00 to start, Polaris is priced above the budget plain rollers, reflecting its dual-fabric choice and broad coordinated palette. Blackout colourways cost more than light-filtering ones. Enter your width and drop for the price at your size; it rounds up to the next standard size as So Easy Blinds quotes it.
How it compares
Against a single-purpose budget roller (such as 247's Roma or Trapani), Polaris costs more but offers the blackout-or-light-filtering choice in a matched palette - worth it when you are fitting several rooms and want consistency, less necessary for a single window where a cheaper plain will do.
Against a day-and-night blind, Polaris gives you a committed fabric (fully blackout or fully filtering) rather than an adjustable one. If you want a room to go properly dark, a Polaris blackout does that where a day-and-night only filters; if you want adjustable daytime light, the day-and-night is the better tool.