If you are visiting the shop please can we ask that you wear a face covering if you are able and use the hand sanitiser or gloves provided if you want to look at curtain samples. If you have any queries please call us on 01535 643111 or alternatively email Gill at materialworthgill@gmail.com or Catriona on materialworthcat@gmail.com.
If you are unable to come into the shop but have a new curtain or soft furnishing project in mind we are also happy to help via phone or email and we can have samples delivered to your home. Please feel free to browse the collections from all our suppliers in the fabrics section of our website and contact us if you would like to chat about anything fabric or curtain related.
If you are unable to come into the shop but have a new curtain or soft furnishing project in mind we are also happy to help via phone or email and we can have samples delivered to your home. Please feel free to browse the collections from all our suppliers in the fabrics section of our website and contact us if you would like to chat about anything fabric or curtain related.
Services
Material Worth always aims to listen to you. We pride ourselves in helping our customers put together a decorative composition that reflects their taste and needs. Our talented staff will listen to you and will go through all the options with you in an effort to find the right solution. We also provide a free measuring and advice service within a reasonable travelling distance from the shop.
We have been commisioned by various museums and private estates to collaborate on restoration projects, using bespoke fabrics and lovingly reproduced at our premises in Cross Roads. Here are a few examples of them. This is our most local heritage project. As part of the museums' recent refurbishment, we have made new curtains and pelmets for the dining room and for Mr. Nicholl's Study.
We have had several commissions from Cliffe Castle Museum in Keighley, including the spectacular Grand Drawing Room. The fabric for this project was specially woven in India from a pattern that was originally used in the Grand Drawing Room in the 1870's.
Luckily the museum staff had a photograph of the original decor and we took great care to reproduce the window dressings exactly as the would have looked when Henry Issac Butterfield was the owner of the house.These curtains were made as part of the China In Yorkshire project.
Luckily the museum staff had a photograph of the original decor and we took great care to reproduce the window dressings exactly as the would have looked when Henry Issac Butterfield was the owner of the house.These curtains were made as part of the China In Yorkshire project.