Moiré is coming back in a way – here’s how interior designers are using the pattern

Simon Brown
Over the centuries, moiré – a type of silk or viscose fabric with a distinct rippled, watermarked effect – has fallen in and out of favour, but looking at this year’s new collections, it’s coming back in a big way. The fabric’s origins date back to the 1600s, when it was popular among the upper classes and royalty of Europe. Once a highly expensive (as it was only made from silk until relatively recently), it has long been associated with royalty, having been used to line the walls at Versailles and Hampton Court Palace, and it also famously decorated Queen Victoria herself in the form of a royal blue sash. More recently, ‘Debo’, the late Duchess of Devonshire – a perennial paragon of style – covered the walls of her study in green moiré, combining it with piles of books and chintzy sofas. In the wider world, however, moiré fell out of fashion in the 20th century, all of a sudden, it seems to have caught the design world’s attention once more. Where it might once have been a staple in grand houses, however, it is now being used in strikingly modern schemes, which give a new lease of life to this once-traditional fabric.
At WOW!House this year – a brilliant source of design inspiration – not one, but two rooms were wrapped in moiré. Studio Ashby used a range of jewel tone moirés to decorate the walls and ceiling of their sitting room, designed in partnership with United in Design. Meanwhile in the Zimmer + Rohde Bedroom Suite, Tolu Adẹ̀kọ́ chose the brand’s ‘Dimora’ moiré in an inky blue-black to add drama to the walls. “I’m particularly fond of using moiré fabric for wall coverings, upholstery, and drapery due to its unique texture,” Tolu explains. “Each piece of moiré brings an artisanal element to a project, and I appreciate how it creates a sense of movement and depth. When applied to walls or ceilings, it adds a mesmerising effect, enhancing the room’s dynamics and making the space come alive.”
This is certainly the case and as such, moiré has been referred to as ‘watered silk’ for the way it mirrors the ripples of the sea, though its look has also been likened to wood grain. The process to create moiré is called ‘calendaring’ and involves rolling a moistened, woven fabric between specially patterned rollers under high temperature and pressure, which creates the crushed effect that leaves some parts glossy and others matte. “I have a real appreciation for the craftsmanship involved in its making,” says Zoffany’s lead designer, Peter Gomez, who has included moiré wallcoverings in his collections for the brand this year. “There is an understated elegance to a traditionally made moiré; it’s uniquely adaptable, moving from fabric on the wall to curtains and upholstery. It’s a plain fabric with interest, and its organic design interacts with its surroundings, where light and shade bring out its softness and subtle movement. It is incredibly fluid, hence the name ‘watered silk’.”
It’s not just at WOW!House – or even in interiors – that it’s been making a splash. Designer and ceramicist Henry Holland married in a moiré suit (custom made by Sophie Ashby’s husband, Charlie Casely-Hayford) and has recently renovated his bedroom, covering the walls in a pistachio green ‘Elsworthy’ moiré from his new collaboration with Harlequin. “I have always loved moiré as a fabric from my time working in fashion because it has such unique properties,” he explains. “It’s a texture rather than a print and the texture creates much more depth than a plain painted wall or woven cloth.”