Consider faux leather too. Avoids considering the animal issues and has better making-up and cleaning properties (and cheaper usually)
Fabric Suppliers In The UK To Top Market Trade Customers

Fabric Suppliers In The UK To Top Market Interior Designers & Architects are shown in the following directory listing:.
Abbot and Boyd 020 7351 9985
Altfield 020 7351 5893
Alton Brooke 020 7376 7008
Borderline 020 7823 3567
Brian Yates 01524 35035
Brunswig 020 7351 5797
Bruno Triplet 020 7823 9990
Chase Erwin 020 8875 7441
Colefax 020 7244 7427
Colony Fabrics 020 7351 3232
Donghia 020 7823 3456
Gainsborough Silk 01787 372081
Henry Bertrand 020 7349 1477
Jab 020 7349 9323
Jane Churchill 020 7244 7427
Jrobertscott 020 7376 4705
KOTHEA 020 8943 4904
Kravet 020 7795 0110
Lee Jofa 020 7823 3455
Lelievre 020 7352 4798
Manuel Canovas 020 8877 6400
Nobilis 020 7351 7878
Pierre Frey 0207 376 55 99
Robert Allen 01494 474741
Sacho Hesslein 020 7352 6168
Silk Gallery 020 7351 1790
Turnell and Gigon 020 7259 7280
Watts Westminster 020 7376 4486
Zimmer and Rhode 020 7351 7115
Zoffany 08708 300 350
Many of these fabric companies sell a wide range of products including: chenille, contract fabric, faux / fake leather, mohair velvet, linen velvet, cotton velvet, wool, hand woven products, natural silk, cashmere and damask for upholstery, curtains and cushions.
Pink Linen For Upholstery & Curtains
Pink linen is a rather rare and unusual flower. Not often specified in your average interior designer’s scheme. I found this scan that we had emailed someone recently for the client to choose for some curtains. We were even able to introduce different pinks into the warp and weft of the linen for an unusual effect. (We can do that with most of our linen colours).
Anyway, I just thought the pink linen image looked nice and I wanted to share it with you!
Silk Velvet – What makes a great upholstery velvet

Silk Velvet really is one of the great upholstery velvets. It looks great, it feels great and it can be up to the job if your upholstery velvet is chosen wisely.
If your last and only experience of a velvet was sitting on one in the cinema then you really haven’t lived!
Firstly let’s look at silk velvet’s suitability for upholstery. It can have a Martindale Rub Test result of over 20,000 – so it CAN be readily suitable for many upholstery uses.
Composition. Just because it is sold as 100% silk can be misleading and not necessarily relevant. Is this 90% silk velvet better than that 100% silk velvet? You just can’t answer that by simply looking at the composition.
A silk velvet that is sold as being 100% silk may in fact be a 100% silk velvet pile and 100% cotton backcloth. There is nothing inherently wrong with that. If it is the look and feel of the silk that you are looking for then maybe it’s best to just consider the pile (assuming the backcloth is up to the job of course). One of our fine silk velvets has a 100% pile and then a backcloth of silk and cotton – with the cotton being added for strength and the overall silk content being 90%. Compare this to our Italian Silk & Cashmere Velvet which has a 70% silk + 30% cashmere pile.
Next look at the silkiness or the shininess. If you are looking for a silk velvet you will usually want a shine.
Consider too the length of the pile. Again, there is nothing inherently good or bad about a long or short pile. A shorter pile may be more rigid and upright and that could be a characteristic that you are looking for. Alternatively, a longer pile will probably lay better in one direction – and you may well want that characteristic.
The weight of the fabric in grams per metre is often used as a measure of quality. That is not always true and could, for example, easily be distorted by a heavy and poor quality backcloth.
My personal preference would be to get my hand on a sample; feel it and look at it. What I look for and prefer is a slightly more rigid and consistent pile with a very dense weave. I would look carefully at the country of manufacture. I prefer an Italian velvet (mainly because it sounds better!) but if not Italian then I would certainly only consider a velvet produced in mainland western Europe. But don’t copy me, have the confidence to choose what you like – you are going to have to live with it. I would now choose my upholsterer carefully; many years ago a velvet-covered chair came back for me from a local upholsterer and the pile was not running in a consistent direction…it didn’t look great (read ‘awful’). So don’t, like me, assume that all upholsters know what they are doing with velvets, they patently don’t all know. I would then read our guide to upholstering with velvet – a designer’s worksheet and armed with a bit of knowledge quiz your upholsterer carefully.
Faux Leather Martindale Test – What does it look like
Ever wondered what a Martindale rub test looks like?
We have already shown a video of the machine in action here. Of some additional interest are the following faux leather samples that recently came back to us from the Martindale testing laboratory.

The image above shows the circular cuttings taken of the fabric after being rubbed 200,000 times. As you can see, this faux leather lasted well above the industry standard of 100,000 rubs.
Leatherettes & Fine Faux Leather – More Collections
Faux Leathers are otherwise knows as leatherette, fake leather and artificial leather. We have a short article on their many benefits for interior designer <here>.
KOTHEA® are the UK’s leading producer of fine, performance faux leathers for the contract market.
We have some of the very highest performance faux leather fabrics with Martindale Rub Test results in excess of 200,000…some of the highest in Europe. You can specify this quality of product knowing that you can totally trust its abrasion resistance characteristics.
We have a broad range of collections covering the varied environmental needs of hospitality (spas, restaurants, hotels), marine (yachts), office and household (apartment, villa) usage. Our technical innovation gives the best fabrics and our designers the best patterns and extensive colour palettes.
Related articles
- Fine Faux Leather Upholstery – New Contract Fabrics With High Abrasion Martindale (kothea.com)
- Faux leather Upholstery (kothea.com)
- More Black Faux Leather Upholstery (kothea.com)
- What is faux leather? When should an interior designer use it? (kothea.com)
What is faux leather? When should an interior designer use it?
For a full comparison of PVC, PU and silicone faux leather types across Martindale rub count, fire rating, cleaning compatibility and environmental profile, see our faux leather types compared guide.
English: Leather tanning, Fes, Morocco Français : Tannage du cuir, Fès, Maroc (Photo credit: Wikipedia)Faux leather looks like leather. It is a fabric made out of materials other than leather. Faux is the French for ‘fake’. So it is fake leather. It is cheaper than natural leather and much easier to work with in many cases. As well as a fabric for interiors it is used in many industries: it could be in your car or could make the case covering your iPAD. In the interior design world you would use it for: upholstery and wall-covering but also to cover, doors, table-tops, bar stools, bars, etc.
Types of Faux Leather
There are two main chemical types of faux leather: polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and polyurethane (PU). Both types are used in making clothing, upholstery, and product covers; typically KOTHEA use PVC For our faux leathers. We are able to obtain fine faux leathers with amazing properties as a fabric including extremely high Martindale Rub test scores in excess of 200,000 and extremely accurate animal hide pattern copies.
Compared to Real Leather
Sometimes you can’t tell the difference unless you know what to look for. Most obviously natural leather will not have any kind of repeatable pattern. Faux leather will have a degree of ‘repeat’ but might be sufficiently subtle that you do not notice it. Natural leather has visible and irregular pores and rough edges.
Natural leather tends to have a smoother feel whereas some faux leather may well feel like plastic BUT other faux leathers will feel very similar to the natural leather. The ‘smell’ may be chemically but this could be either the chemicals that have been used to treat the natural leather or the chemicals in the faux leather. A VERY chemically smell that sticks to your hand is probably a faux leather – although most faux leathers will not have this property.
Pros and Cons
Faux leather can generally be made to have very good consistency of colour across batches and in theory can be made to any required colour (in sufficient quantity). Similarly texture and pattern can be varied and/or reproduced much more easily than with a natural product.
Care and maintenance of faux leather is greatly superior to natural leather which requires conditioning. Faux leather can be bought by the metre whereas natural leather must necessarily be bought by ‘the hide’ and hence has join, length and width constraints not necessarily found in the faux alternative. Faux leather generally has superior light fastness and durability.
The animal lover will appreciate that faux leather does not require animals to die. But then again many animals die each year to support the meat industry and leather is an abundant by-product that, if used, you might argue avoids waste. KOTHEA do not sell natural leather.
When should I specify FAUX LEATHER for interior design?
There is certainly a kudos surrounding natural leather. It IS viewed a s a more desirable product. However I’m really not sure why; especially when you look at it logically.
Faux leather is much easier to work with; it is much better suited for any kind of long term interior design use – looking at durability and care & maintenance; it can look and feel the same as natural leather. It is made of chemicals but chemicals (often environmentally damaging ones) are used in the natural leather treatment process.
Whilst I might buy natural leather shoes I would only specify faux leather in a contract interior design situation and would probably also specify faux leather in my house with the possible exception of a statement sofa.
Related articles
- Faux leather Upholstery (kothea.com)
- More Black Faux Leather Upholstery (kothea.com)
- Fine Faux Leather Upholstery – New Contract Fabrics With High Abrasion Martindale (kothea.com)
Fine Faux Leather Upholstery – New Contract Fabrics With High Abrasion Martindale
Upholstery faux leathers are one of our many collections being revamped in 2013. We have introduced a new faux leather with a Martindale rub test score exceeding 200,000. This is one of the highest available in the UK.
It still looks great and also has the added comfort factor of the interior designer knowing that it can be a worry-free product to specify for even demanding contract environments. Providing that it is correctly upholstered and specified it will withstand very significant amounts of abrasion.
Interior Designers: Business Bible
Here are all (most) of our articles on “the business” of interior design. Sales and marketing resources for a modern digital world.
Your comments or likes or backlinks are all appreciated as we invest considerable time into producing this content.
- business-tips-for-interior-designers
- 9-common-interior-design-mistakes-marketing
- 9.5-ways-for-interior-designers-to-make-more-money-profit
- interior-designers-get-more-customers-on-your-website
- Interior-designers-boosting-your-position-in-google-search-results
- the-proactive-interior-designer-1-0-1
- 6-things-that-interior-designers-do-wrong-on-their-web-sites
- interior-designers-5-and-a-half-ways-to-twitter-badly
- pitching-winning-managing-business-for-interior-designers
- use-pinterest-more-to-generate-interest
- facebook-interior-designers-10-steps-to-setup
- retail-interior-designers-8-ways-to-sell-more
- bad-things-they-say-about-interior-designers
- interior-designers-facebook-4-ways-to-correctly-use-it
- 7-facebook-mistakes-interior-designers-make
- designers-twitter-is-rubbish-use-twitter
- interior-design-marketing-2010-predictions
- designers-what-to-blog-about
- spying-on-competitors-staying-ahead
- interior-designer-did-your-web-site-just-popp-up-in-my-search
- interior-design-marketing-strategies
- facebook-adwords-effective-ad-writing-for-interior-designers
- interior-designers-facebook-key-elements-for-your-fan-page
- designers-interior-design-links-how-to-get-them
- target-markets-for-interior-designers-interior-design-marketing-strategy-2012
- interior-designers-an-update-on-using-facebook-linkedin-wordpress-blogs-and-twitter
- interior-designers-in-2012-how-do-people-find-you-on-the-web
- interior-designers-how-to-specify-a-luxury-cashmere-throw-for-your-client-projects
- an-interior-designer-gets-lots-of-web-visitors-but-few-leads-enquiries
- interior-designers-ipad-essential-apps
- interior-designers-to-houzz-or-not-to-houzz
- who-is-the-best-interior-designer-in-the-world
- interior-designers-and-their-financially-lucrative-bit-on-the-side
- interior-design-marketing-strategy-business-strategies-plan-for-designers-2012
- interior-designers-what-should-i-write-about-on-my-blog
- pinterest-and-customer-interest-interior-designers-pin-their-boards-to-the-wall
- interior-designers-why-does-no-one-visit-your-web-site
- marketing-strategies-interior-designers-consider-these-areas
- interior-designers-how-good-is-your-brands-colour/
- how-to-create-a-bad-digital-first-impression-for-interior-designer/
- sponsored-blog-post-by-interior-designers-charge-fair-rates-stop-getting-conned/
For more information on luxury cashmere throws or to request cuttings please visit www.kothea.com. For black faux leather upholstery fabrics try <here> and for mohair velvet and mohair velvet upholstery fabric please follow the links. Upholstery Linen is also one of our specialities as are luxury silk velvet fabrics.
More Black Faux Leather Upholstery
Faux Leather is great for upholstery. Here is a time lapse video of the full process if you want to know how it is done. We would be happy to point you to a local upholsterer but please remember that we only sell the faux leather upholstery fabric. If you would like samples please drop us an email request <here> (trade only). We have several collections of faux leather in most colourways including base colours (black, brown, green, blue, red, yellow, gold) muted neutrals and metallic finishes.
[youtube=https://youtu.be/E333E2nRke4]
