
Collection I · Curtains
The slowest of the textiles
Drapery,
quietly composed.
From sheer linen play to deep blackout silence — every curtain is shaped to the architecture in front of us, lined for the climate, finished for the way the fabric falls when the sun is low.
i · The intent
A curtain is the longest sentence in a room.
Drapery does the slow, structural work of an interior — softening light through the hours of the day, weighting the corners of a room, marking the threshold between architecture and air. We shape each curtain to the wall it will live with: hardware chosen for the ceiling height, lining considered for Dubai's climate, finish drawn for the way the fabric will fall when the light is low. Twelve registers follow — from the lightest sheer to the most ceremonial silk.
“A drape that catches the morning is the difference between a window and a room.”
i.
Sheer Curtains
Voile, linen-blend and silk gauze that hold daylight as if it were a fabric of its own. The room behind them softens; the view becomes a memory of itself. Layered as a single transparent veil or as the inner half of a double-layer dressing.
“Sheer is the curtain that lets the morning stay a little longer.”
Discuss this pieceii.
Blackout Curtains
Triple-lined heavy drapery for cinema-grade darkness, thermal calm and the silence that follows. Specified with acoustic interlinings for bedrooms and media rooms where the absence of light is part of the design.
“True darkness is a luxury most rooms are never given.”
Discuss this pieceiii.
Linen Curtains
Belgian and Irish linens, hand-finished and pre-washed for a softened drape. Lined or unlined, they age into the room rather than against it — the same fabric reading warmer in winter light and cooler in summer haze.
“Linen is the only fabric that improves with the years it spends with you.”
Discuss this pieceiv.
Velvet Curtains
Cotton velvet and silk-velvet drapery — the heaviest, most cinematic textile in the atelier. Reserved for libraries, theatres and the rooms that need to feel like a held breath. Hand-pleated and weighted at the hem.
“Velvet does not enter a room — it composes it.”
Discuss this piecev.
Wave Curtains
A continuous, soft S-fold engineered with concealed track and silicone-glide cording. The fabric reads as a single uninterrupted ripple — the cleanest possible statement for contemporary, gallery-like architecture.
“Wave is the curtain for the room that wants nothing else.”
Discuss this piecevi.
Pinch Pleat Curtains
Double and triple pinch pleats hand-stitched into a structured, tailored header — the classical drapery vocabulary. Specified for traditional interiors, formal salons and rooms that ask for a deliberate, architectural fall.
“The pleat is where the tailor and the architect agree.”
Discuss this piecevii.
Motorised Curtains
Whisper-quiet Somfy and Forest drives, integrated with the home's lighting and climate scenes. Programmed for KNX, Lutron and Control4, and mirrored to a mobile app so the room opens and closes with a touch — from the bedside, or from the airport lounge.
- Somfy Motor
- Forest Motor
- Home Automation Integration
- Mobile App Control
“The best technology is the kind you stop noticing within a week.”
Discuss this pieceviii.
Double-Layer Curtains
Sheer inner layer for daytime, lined outer layer for evening — drawn independently on parallel tracks. The most versatile dressing in the atelier, and the one most often specified for Dubai-facing facades.
“Two layers, two rooms — the same window.”
Discuss this pieceix.
Roman Curtains
Soft-fold Roman shades in linen, cotton and silk — the curtain for windows that want a quieter presence. Drawn flat at the sill or stacked into a tailored crown above the architrave. Cordless and motorised options available.
“A Roman shade is a curtain that knows when to step back.”
Discuss this piecex.
Hotel Curtains
Full project specification for hospitality — fire-retardant linings, IFR fabrics, contract-grade hardware and standardised mock-ups for repeat-room rollout. Delivered with installation programmes that respect a live operating environment.
“The hardest curtain to specify is the one nobody notices, in every room.”
Discuss this piecexi.
Luxury Drapes
The ceremonial register — silk, jacquard, hand-embroidered linings, weighted hems, pelmets, swags and trims. Reserved for projects where the drapery is part of the architecture rather than dressing for it.
“A ceremonial drape is the longest sentence a room can speak.”
Discuss this piecexii.
Kids Room Curtains
A quieter register composed for the youngest room in the house — premium child-friendly linens and pre-washed cottons, blackout-lined for undisturbed sleep, cordless and cord-safe for calm operation. Custom sizes drawn to the exact opening, and fully compatible with the atelier's smart motorisation.
- Premium child-friendly fabrics
- Blackout-lined options
- Safe, cordless operation
- Soft, tactile textures
- Custom sizing
- Smart motorisation compatible
“The gentlest curtain in the house belongs in the smallest bedroom.”
Discuss this piecexiii.
Custom Curtains
Anything outside the categories above — non-standard heights above 4.5 metres, curved bay tracks, ship and yacht specifications, archival fabrics, restoration of inherited pieces. Quoted individually, drawn for the room.
“There is a curtain for every wall — we simply have not drawn it yet.”
Discuss this pieceiii · Materials
Twelve fabrics, weighed and chosen for the room.
Every curtain begins as a sample on a wall and ends as a fabric the room will live with for years. We work only with mills we visit and weights we have hung.
01.
Belgian Linen
240 – 320 g/m²
Pre-washed for a softened drape, woven on heritage looms in Kortrijk. The atelier standard for unlined and lightly-lined drapery.
02.
Irish Linen
260 – 340 g/m²
A slightly tighter weave with a cooler hand — specified for north-facing rooms and architectural minimal interiors.
03.
Cotton Velvet
380 – 460 g/m²
Dense, matte-finish velvet with a deep light-absorbing pile. The fabric for libraries, media rooms and ceremonial drapery.
04.
Silk-Velvet Blend
320 – 400 g/m²
Lighter than pure velvet, with the sheen of silk on the surface. Reserved for the most cinematic salons.
05.
Linen-Silk Voile
120 – 160 g/m²
The atelier's sheer of choice — soft enough to billow, structured enough to hold a tailored header.
06.
Jacquard Silk
bespoke
Custom-woven from archival patterns or commissioned designs. Lead time eight to twelve weeks.
iv · The process
From the first visit to the final fall.
A bespoke curtain is a programme of three site visits, two fabric reviews and one quiet installation. The schedule is shaped around your home, not the other way.
Step 01
Site visit & light study
We visit at the hour of day the room is most used, measure twice, photograph the architecture and listen to how the room is lived in.
Step 02
Fabric review at the showroom
Three to five edited fabric directions, presented against the room's palette. No catalogue browsing — only fabrics we believe in for your project.
Step 03
Atelier make-up
Cut, lined, weighted and hand-finished in our Deira atelier. one week for standard specifications, longer for ceremonial drapery.
Step 04
Installation & dressing
Hardware installed, fabric hung, pleats dressed and trained. We return after seven days to re-dress and adjust as the fabric settles.
Closing · Curtains
Send the window.
We will return a route forward.
A photograph, a measurement, a feeling about the light. Whichever you have is enough to begin a conversation.
