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The best ways to use blinds with curtains

Aria Jansen
  • Aria Jansen
  • Consultant

In short

You don't have to choose between curtains and blinds — pairing them on the same window gives you the best of both for light, privacy and warmth. Some combinations work better than others, and a pelmet adds a polished finish while boosting insulation. When you mix them across different windows in a room, keep heights consistent and tie everything together with a considered approach to pattern and colour.

Living room layering coral, blush and denim striped curtains with white plantation shutters.

Curtains or blinds? Why not curtains AND blinds! Not only can you use both in the same room on separate windows, you can also use them together on the same window to great effect. Here’s how…

Table of contents

How do you use blinds and curtains on the same window?

Which blinds and curtains work best together?

Take this with a grain of salt as it could vary depending on your windows, but here is a basic list of configurations we’ve found work best when you want both on one window:

  • Curtains or sheers over venetian blinds (this option offers the most versatility as you can have the blind completely raised or lowered but with the slats tilted to let in light)

  • Lined curtains over sunscreen roller blind

  • Lined curtains or sheers over shutters

  • Sheer curtains over blockout roller blind

  • Sheer curtains over honeycomb blind

  • Roman blind over shutters

Close-up of a dove-grey blockout roller blind stacked above a bedroom window.

Pelmets add a stylish, decorative finish and help to boost your curtains and blinds’ thermal insulating properties. Recessed pelmets offer a really streamlined finish because they’re actually built into the room and hide any tracks and operating mechanisms up in the ceiling. It’s a very slick, elegant finish.

How do you mix blinds and curtains across different windows in a room?

Don’t pick the same curtains and blinds for across the house. Different rooms will have different demands both practically and décor-wise. You might want bedrooms to be dark and cosy but your living area to be light and airy, for example. Ultimately it’s your choice but here’s a thought starter; make your decision based on window size, perhaps opting for curtains across big windows and blinds for small ones.

If you’re using a mixture of both on different windows but in the same room, hang them at the same height or risk a very lopsided look. If you have windows in a room that are at different heights, simply hang one window treatment higher to match the other.

Having more than one pattern in a room is fine if you get it right, messy and overwhelming if you get it wrong. If you’re only going to have one patterned, we recommend it’s the curtains, as when the blind is raised you won’t get to enjoy the pattern like you still do with curtains.

Bedroom with a taupe roman blind paired with sheer dove and blue curtains.

Follow our tips to make more than one pattern in a room work very well:

  • Know what kind of look you want to go for, eg. florals have a feminine vibe, stripes can be either contemporary or classic, animal prints are exotic and eclectic.

  • Use at least three patterns and vary the scale.

  • Try to use colours of the same intensity or hue, eg. don’t mix pastels with jewel tones.

  • Distribute patterns evenly throughout the room, don’t let them dominate one side more than any other.

  • Break them up with solids. Using too many patterns on top off each other can feel chaotic.

  • Patterns don’t have to be different colors, try tone-on-tone patterns for elegance with character.A ‘pattern’ could be as simple as a new texture, eg. wood grain in Venetian blinds.

Another way to have curtains and blinds existing harmoniously in one space is to co-ordinate the colour scheme. Here are some suggestions:

Repeat the wall colour – either choose a patterned fabric in which the wall colour features or go for the same shade (or one or two lighter or darker) to blend the wall and curtains together and give the illusion of more space.

Go monochrome – this means ‘one colour’. Choose solid coloured curtains in a noticeably lighter or darker shade the same colour as your walls, eg. mint green with forest green.

Complementary colours - these are the colours directly opposite one another on a colour wheel. Choose a patterned fabric that features a complementary colour to the feature wall, eg. a yellow feature wall contrasts beautifully with a fabric with splashes of mauve. Or vice versa, a patterned wallpaper teamed with curtain fabric in a solid colour found within that pattern.

Embrace the versatility of neutrals - neutrals work well with almost every colour and with other neutrals too, regardless of whether it’s a block colour or pattern. Just make sure you have multiple shades happening around the room to avoid a stark look. Neutrals also work well to tone down very strong colours.

Our style consultants are really skilled at knowing what works best where so when it comes to choosing the right curtains and or blinds for each room of your home, they can help guide you through your choices. Book your free in-home consultation today.

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Guides

Ivory woven-texture blockout roller blind lowered on a window with greenery outside.

Choosing the right blinds for your home

Not sure which blinds will suit your home? From blind types and key features to room-by-room advice, this guide covers everything you need to know.

Read the guide

Frequently asked questions

Can you use blinds and curtains on the same window?

Yes, and pairing them often gives the best result. Combinations like sheers over venetian blinds, lined curtains over a sunscreen roller, or sheer curtains over a blockout roller let you fine-tune light, privacy and warmth through the day and night.

If I'm only having one patterned layer, should it be the curtains or the blind?

We recommend the curtains carry the pattern. When a blind is raised you no longer see its pattern, whereas curtains keep their pattern on show whether they are open or closed.

How do I mix curtains and blinds in the same room without it looking messy?

Hang everything at the same height to avoid a lopsided look, and tie the room together through colour — repeating the wall colour, going monochrome, using complementary tones, or leaning on neutrals. If you mix patterns, vary the scale, keep colours at a similar intensity and break things up with solids.

Do pelmets do anything besides look good?

They do both. A pelmet gives a stylish, finished look — a recessed pelmet hides the tracks and mechanisms for a streamlined effect — and it also helps boost the thermal insulating properties of your curtains and blinds.

Expert advice at home

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