Printed Shade Fabric Options

Compare our printed shade fabrics: light filtering, room darkening, and blackout options. Light transmission, privacy levels, and print quality.

Window shade customization interface showing fabric style, motorization, and fascia options

Complete Guide to Printed Shade Fabric Options

Selecting the right fabric for your custom printed window shade is one of the most important decisions in your ordering process. The fabric you choose determines how much light enters your room, your level of privacy, energy efficiency, and how your printed image appears. This comprehensive guide covers every fabric option we offer, helping you make an informed choice that perfectly matches your needs.

All our fabrics are specifically engineered to accept high-quality digital printing. Whether you choose blackout, light-filtering, or solar screen materials, your custom image will be reproduced with exceptional clarity, vibrant colors, and fade-resistant durability rated for 10+ years under normal indoor conditions.

Understanding Light Control: Opacity and Openness

Before diving into specific fabric types, it helps to understand two key measurements: opacity and openness factor. Opacity refers to how much light the fabric blocks—a 100% opaque fabric blocks all light. Openness factor measures the percentage of the fabric surface that consists of tiny holes allowing light and air to pass through.

Blackout Fabrics (0% Openness, 95-100% Opacity)

Blackout fabrics provide complete light blockage, making them ideal for bedrooms, nurseries, home theaters, and media rooms where darkness is essential. The opaque backing prevents any light from passing through, creating a dark environment even during bright daylight hours. For printed shades, blackout fabric offers an additional advantage: because no light passes through the fabric, your printed image appears with maximum vibrancy and color saturation. There is no "washing out" effect from backlighting.

Our blackout fabrics are constructed with either a white backing (which reflects heat and light back outside) or a colored backing that matches the print side for a uniform appearance from outdoors. The white-backed option offers slightly better energy efficiency, while the color-matched backing provides a more refined exterior appearance.

Room-Darkening Fabrics (Less than 1% Openness, 50-95% Opacity)

Room-darkening fabrics block most light while allowing a subtle glow around the edges. They provide significant light reduction without the complete blackout effect, making them suitable for bedrooms where you want darkness for sleep but prefer some ambient light during the day. These fabrics offer excellent privacy—silhouettes are not visible from outside at any time.

Light-Filtering Fabrics (1-5% Openness, 15-50% Opacity)

Light-filtering fabrics soften and diffuse incoming sunlight, creating a pleasant, evenly-lit ambiance. They reduce glare on screens and reflective surfaces while maintaining privacy during daylight hours. At night with interior lights on, silhouettes may be visible from outside, so these fabrics are best for living rooms, offices, and spaces where nighttime privacy is less critical. The diffused light these fabrics create is ideal for working, reading, or any activity where harsh direct sunlight would be uncomfortable.

Solar Screen Fabrics (5-14% Openness)

Solar screen fabrics are designed specifically to reduce heat and glare while maintaining outward visibility. The open weave allows you to see through the shade during daylight hours—the view is similar to looking through a window screen. These fabrics block 86-95% of UV rays and reject up to 78% of solar heat, making them excellent for energy efficiency in sunny rooms.

Privacy with solar screens is directional: during the day when it is brighter outside than inside, you can see out but people cannot see in. At night when interior lights are on, visibility reverses—people outside can see silhouettes inside. For this reason, solar screens are often paired with secondary window treatments (drapes or blinds) for nighttime privacy.

Fabric Types at a Glance

Quick comparison of our fabric options

Blackout

0% openness, complete darkness. Best for bedrooms, media rooms, nurseries. Maximum print vibrancy.

Room-Darkening

Under 1% openness, significant light reduction. Great for bedrooms wanting some ambient light.

Light-Filtering

1-5% openness, softens daylight. Ideal for living rooms, offices, dining areas.

Solar 1%

Maximum UV protection (99%), limited view-through. Best heat rejection with privacy.

Solar 5%

Most popular solar option. Balanced UV protection (95%), glare reduction, and visibility.

Solar 10-14%

Maximum outward visibility with good glare reduction. Lower privacy.

Fabric Composition and Construction

Fiberglass Core Fabrics

Fiberglass core fabrics are constructed with glass fiber yarns (200-400 filaments per yarn) coated with PVC. The fiberglass provides exceptional dimensional stability—these fabrics do not stretch, shrink, or warp with temperature and humidity changes. This makes them ideal for large windows and commercial applications where consistent flat hanging is essential. Fiberglass fabrics are inherently fire resistant and typically meet NFPA 701 standards without additional treatment.

Polyester Core Fabrics

Polyester core fabrics use synthetic polyester fibers (50-100 filaments per yarn) with PVC coating. While slightly thicker and heavier than fiberglass, polyester fabrics offer a softer hand feel and are often preferred for residential applications. Polyester cores are also available in PVC-free versions for eco-conscious customers. These fabrics may require fire-retardant treatment to meet commercial fire codes.

PVC-Free and Eco-Friendly Options

For customers concerned about environmental impact and indoor air quality, we offer PVC-free fabric options. These fabrics use alternative coatings such as TPO (thermoplastic olefins) or are constructed entirely from 100% recyclable polyester. Many PVC-free fabrics are GREENGUARD Gold certified for low chemical emissions and qualify for LEED building certification points. These eco-friendly options are free from PVC, formaldehyde, antimony, halogen compounds, and other chemicals of concern.

How Fabric Choice Affects Your Print

The fabric you select influences how your printed image appears on the finished shade. Understanding these effects helps you choose the fabric that best showcases your specific image.

Blackout Fabrics and Print Vibrancy

Blackout fabrics produce the most vibrant prints because no light passes through to wash out colors. Dark areas of your image appear truly dark, and colors are rich and saturated. If your image has significant contrast or deep shadows, blackout fabric will reproduce those elements most faithfully. Photographs of night scenes, dark interiors, or images with significant black areas look best on blackout fabric.

Light-Filtering and Solar Fabrics

Light-filtering and solar fabrics allow some light to pass through, which affects image appearance. Dark areas will appear lighter than on blackout fabric because light shines through. Colors may appear slightly desaturated when backlit. Images with bright, light colors and minimal dark areas work well on these fabrics. Landscapes with bright skies, light-colored artwork, and images without significant shadowed areas are good choices.

Viewing Angle and Lighting Conditions

The appearance of your printed shade changes throughout the day based on lighting conditions. In the morning with direct sun, even light-filtering fabrics may appear somewhat backlit. In the evening with interior lights, the print faces the light source and appears at its most vibrant. Consider when you will most often see the shade and what lighting conditions will be present.

Fabric Selection FAQs

Which fabric is best for bedrooms?

Blackout or room-darkening fabrics are ideal for bedrooms. Blackout provides complete darkness for the best sleep quality and works well for night-shift workers or light-sensitive sleepers. Room-darkening offers significant light reduction while allowing some ambient light, which some people prefer for waking naturally in the morning.

Can I see out through a solar screen fabric?

Yes, during daylight hours when it is brighter outside than inside, you can see through solar screen fabrics—similar to looking through a window screen. The higher the openness percentage (10% vs 3%), the clearer the view. At night with interior lights on, visibility reverses and silhouettes may be visible from outside.

Which fabric has the best energy efficiency?

Solar screen fabrics with lower openness percentages (1-5%) offer the best energy efficiency, blocking up to 78% of solar heat and 95%+ of UV rays. They significantly reduce cooling costs in sunny rooms. Blackout fabrics with white backing also provide good insulation by reflecting heat back outside.

Do you offer free fabric samples?

Yes! We strongly encourage requesting free fabric samples before ordering. Samples allow you to see and feel each fabric type, observe how light passes through, and see printed examples on each material. Request samples through our contact form or call our team directly.

What about cleaning and maintenance?

All our printed fabrics can be cleaned with a soft dry cloth or vacuum using the brush attachment on low suction. For spot cleaning, use a slightly damp cloth with mild soap. Avoid harsh chemicals, abrasive cleaners, and excessive moisture. Never machine wash or dry clean printed shade fabric.

Are fabrics fire rated for commercial use?

Yes, we offer fabrics that meet NFPA 701 fire resistance standards required for commercial installations in schools, offices, restaurants, hotels, and other public spaces. Specify fire rating requirements when ordering, and we will confirm your selected fabric meets applicable codes.

See Our Work

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Need Help Choosing Your Fabric?

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This resource is specific to printed window shades.

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  • Motorization Options for Printed Shades

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  • Printed Window Shade Specifications

    Detailed specifications for custom printed window shades. Dimensions, weights, hardware, and compatibility.

Put this to work.

Our team helps specifiers, architects, and designers tailor printed window shades to the job — get a quote, request samples, or start your design.

Window shade customization interface showing fabric style, motorization, and fascia options