If you’ve ever fallen in love with multiple fabrics at once — a botanical, a floral, a leafy print — and wondered how to mix floral patterns without it feeling busy, you’re not alone.
Our Morning Room has become my little design study in layering blue and green botanical fabrics in a way that feels timeless, collected, and calm.
Here’s exactly how I’m doing it — and the specific fabrics I’m using.
Why I Chose Blue + Green
There’s something inherently peaceful about blue and green interior design. It’s nature’s palette — sky and garden, water and leaves — and it instantly softens a space.
For our Morning Room, I wanted something fresh but not trendy. Something layered, but not overwhelming.
Blue brings familiarity and softness.
Green brings life and movement.
Together, they feel grounded — especially when used in classic botanical patterns.
Step 1: Start with a Larger-Scale Anchor
Every layered space needs an anchor.
For our curtains, I chose this beautiful Spencer Botanical Leaf in Stonewash Blue.
It’s a larger-scale botanical, which means it immediately sets the tone of the room.
When you’re learning how to mix floral patterns, this is the key:
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Choose one dominant print.
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Let everything else “play off” of it.
The generous scale gives the eye something confident to rest on. It anchors the room.
✨ Bigger scale = visual anchor.
Green Leaf Print Fabric Spencer Tendril Green Slub Linen Natural Botanical Print Natural Inspired Cotton Linen 54″ wide
Step 2: Repeat the Color Story (Even in Other Rooms)
One of my favorite design tricks is repeating color between spaces.
For Emma’s room, I chose this Green Leaf Spencer Tendril Fabric.
The pattern changes — but the blue-green family remains consistent.
This is how homes feel cohesive without feeling matchy.
Same family. Different expression.
When the color palette repeats, pattern mixing feels intentional instead of chaotic.
Step 3: Vary Scale + Soften Contrast
Next, I layered in this softer Green + Blue Floral Cotton Linen.
This print has:
- A smaller scale
- Softer contrast
- Less intensity
When mixing botanical fabric decorating ideas, I follow this rule:
- One large
- One medium
- One smaller
And vary the boldness.
That difference in intensity keeps things layered — not busy.
Blue Floral Upholstery Fabric – Cotton/Linen – 54″ wide – Natural Botanical Print – Premier Prints – Perry Stonewash Florence Natural
Step 4: Let Bold Live in a Defined Space
I’m considering reupholstering our ottoman in this Blue Floral Upholstery Fabric.
An ottoman is the perfect place to introduce something stronger.
Because it’s structured and contained, the pattern doesn’t overwhelm the room.
✨ Always let bold live in a defined space.
Why Botanical Prints Feel Timeless
There’s a reason botanical prints continue to show up in cottage homes, coastal spaces, and classic interiors.
They mimic nature.
And nature doesn’t go out of style.
When you layer blue and green botanical fabrics in balanced scale and tone, they feel collected — not trendy.
That’s always my goal.
Want Help Mixing Patterns in Your Own Home?
If you’ve ever:
- Saved five fabrics and had no idea how to combine them
- Loved blue and green interior design but worried it would feel too busy
- Wanted confidence when mixing florals and botanicals
This is exactly where I come in.
Inside my Partner Shopping Interior Design service, I work right alongside you to curate fabrics, finishes, and furnishings that layer beautifully together.
Prefer to work remotely? My Virtual Design service provides custom design boards, layouts, and product selections so you can confidently execute the look on your own.
Curated design. Right by your side.




