The Willow Field is a made-to-measure Roman blind sold by 247 Blinds in 10 colourways, with prices starting from £17.00. It sits at the accessible end of the Roman blind market while offering a notably broad palette for a single range.

Who it suits

Roman blinds fold into horizontal pleats when raised, which gives them a softer, more layered look than roller blinds. That makes the Willow Field a natural fit for living rooms and dining rooms where you want something with more visual weight than a plain roller. The concertina stack at the top when the blind is raised does reduce the usable glass area, so it works best in windows where you don't need maximum light during the day.

The palette includes several muted neutrals - Stone Grey, Slate, Natural, Mercury - that suit bedrooms well. The opacity of the fabric is not stated in the retailer's listing, so if you need a confirmed blackout or dimout performance for a bedroom, check directly with 247 Blinds before ordering. Roman blinds can be lined for additional opacity, but whether a lining option is offered here is not specified.

This range is not suited to bathrooms or kitchens. The fabric construction of most Roman blinds makes them vulnerable to steam and grease; aluminium venetians or PVC rollers are a better call in those rooms.

The colours

10 colours available

The ten colourways cover a wider-than-usual spread for a range at this price point. On the neutral end you have Natural, Stone Grey, Slate, and Mercury - a progression from warm beige through cool mid-grey. The warmer end of the range includes French Coral and Romance, with Pastel Pink and Precious Pink adding two blush tones that differ in saturation rather than hue. Onyx is the darkest option; Indigo adds a purple-blue note that positions it as a more distinctive choice for accent use.

Broadly: if your room is built around greys and whites, Mercury, Slate, or Stone Grey give the most flexibility. If you want something that reads as a deliberate colour choice rather than a background, French Coral or Indigo will do that without pushing into very bold territory. The two pinks are worth considering separately - Pastel Pink is the quieter of the pair, while Precious Pink sits closer to a mid-tone blush.

Price by your dimensions

Enter your window size. We round up to the next standard size, which matches how the retailer actually quotes you.

The from-price puts Willow Field at the accessible end of the made-to-measure Roman market. Roman blinds are generally more expensive than roller blinds of equivalent size because of the fabric quantity and construction involved, so this entry point is worth noting. Prices will scale with width and drop; wider and longer blinds use significantly more fabric, so the difference between a small and a large window can be substantial.

How it compares

Within the Roman blind category, the Willow Field's main point of difference is the breadth of its colour range: ten options including both warm and cool tones is more than many ranges at this price. If colour variety matters more than fabric texture or weave character, that's a genuine advantage.

If you need confirmed blackout performance - for a child's bedroom or a shift worker - a roller blind with an independently verified blackout fabric is likely a more reliable choice than a Roman at a similar price, because the opacity of Roman fabrics is harder to guarantee without a lining. If thermal performance is a priority, a cellular or honeycomb blind outperforms any Roman blind of equivalent price, since the sealed air pockets in cellular construction provide insulation that a flat fabric cannot match. The Willow Field is strongest as a room-finishing choice in living and dining spaces where comfort and softness matter more than technical light control.