Light · Sleep · The Honest Answer
Do Velvet Curtains Really Block Light?
The straight answer, with real percentages — how much light velvet blocks on its own, where light still sneaks through, and whether you need the blackout option for proper sleep.
The honest answer, up front
Yes — and more than you’d expect. A standard premium velvet curtain blocks roughly 80–90% of light without any lining, just from its weight and dense pile. That’s comfortable “room darkening” for living rooms, but a bedroom usually wants more. Adding a blackout finish or lining pushes it to near-total darkness — around 99% — which is the right choice for bedrooms, nurseries, and anyone sensitive to morning light.
It’s the single most-asked question about velvet curtains: “they look beautiful, but do they actually block light?” The skepticism makes sense — cheap velvet looks heavy but isn’t, and a thin curtain in a pretty colour can let in surprisingly bright sunlight in the morning. So here’s an honest, numbers-led breakdown of what velvet really does to light, where it falls short, and how to know whether the standard fabric is enough for your room or whether you need the blackout option.
What “blackout” really means
Before the velvet question, some terminology — because curtain companies use these words loosely.
- Sheer: blocks 10–30% of light. Decorative; daytime privacy only.
- Light filtering: blocks 30–60%. Softens light, doesn’t darken.
- Room darkening: blocks 70–90%. Dim enough for most living rooms; not for sleep.
- Blackout: blocks 95–100%. True darkness, even at midday.
Standard velvet, by industry standards, comfortably sits in the room-darkening band — very effective, but not technically “blackout” unless it has a blackout finish or lining. That’s an important distinction we’ll keep coming back to.
The Light Meter
How much light each fabric actually blocks
Approximate values based on industry data — darker fabrics block marginally more within each range.
So velvet on its own already comfortably outperforms every fabric short of dedicated blackout material. That’s why velvet is so popular for living rooms — you usually don’t need anything more. For a bedroom, that final stretch from 85% to 99% is the difference between “dim enough to nap” and “dark enough to sleep until 10 AM”.
How velvet actually blocks light
Velvet’s light-blocking isn’t magic — it’s the result of three physical properties working together. Understanding them tells you what to look for when buying.
Dense pile
Velvet’s short, upright fibres (the pile) form a thick forest of yarn that physically intercepts light. The denser the pile, the more light is absorbed before it reaches the back of the curtain. Cheap velvet has thin pile and lets light through.
Weight & weave
Heavyweight velvet (around 240–320 GSM) has a tighter base weave — fewer gaps between threads. Hold lighter velvet to a window and you’ll see pinpricks of light; hold premium velvet and you won’t.
Colour absorption
Dark colours absorb more light than they reflect. A black or bordeaux velvet blocks marginally more light than ivory or beige — though the difference within premium velvet is small. Cheap velvet shows colour difference because the fabric itself is too thin.
Where light still sneaks through (and how to fix it)
Here’s what most curtain articles won’t tell you: even a 99% blackout curtain isn’t 100% darkness if it’s installed wrong. The fabric is only half the equation — where the curtain meets the window is the other half.
The 4 places light leaks — and the fix
Address these and you’ll squeeze the maximum darkness out of whatever curtain you own.
The top
Light spills over the rod into the room above the curtain. Fix: mount the rod 6–8 inches above the window frame, or use a ceiling-mounted track that puts the curtain flush against the wall.
The sides
Light wraps around the curtain edges where the fabric doesn’t fully cover the wall. Fix: oversize the curtain panel by 10–15 cm on each side beyond the window frame, and use a pleated (American pleat) header which creates deeper folds that hug the wall.
The bottom
A short curtain creates a glowing strip of light along the floor. Fix: the curtain should kiss the floor — or pool slightly — not sit above it. This is the single biggest curtain-length mistake.
The eyelet gaps
Eyelet curtains let thin slivers of light through the holes at the top, especially with a thin rod. Fix: for bedrooms, choose American pleat instead — it doesn’t have this leak point. Or use a thicker rod that fills the eyelet completely.
The 5-Second Self-Test
How to check if your curtains are blocking enough light
Close your existing curtains during the brightest part of the day. Stand inside the room and hold your hand 10 inches in front of your face.
If you can see your hand clearly, you’re in the 30–60% range. If you can see its outline only, you’re at 70–85% — standard velvet territory. If you can’t see your hand at all, you have a true blackout setup.
It’s the simplest way to know whether your current curtains are doing enough — and whether you need to upgrade to velvet or to the blackout option.
Standard velvet or the blackout option: which do you need?
This is the actual decision most buyers face. The answer is almost always one of these two:
Choose Standard Velvet
Blocks ~85% — room-darkening
- Living rooms, dining rooms, drawing rooms
- Study or home office (controls screen glare)
- Guest bedrooms with light sleepers
- Rooms where a soft glow during the day is welcome
- Anywhere you want the look and warmth of velvet without total darkness
Choose The Blackout Option
Blocks ~99% — true darkness
- Master bedrooms, especially east-facing
- Nurseries and toddler bedrooms (naps)
- Shift workers and day sleepers
- Home theatres and media rooms
- Bedrooms with streetlights outside
Real scenarios: what most people actually buy
Five common situations and the realistic recommendation for each:
Living room · everyday family use
“I want a beautiful, slightly cooler room with soft daylight.”
Standard velvet is exactly right. It blocks heat and harsh sun without making the room feel sealed off, and you still get a soft ambient glow.
Master bedroom · east-facing window
“The sun wakes me up at 5:30 AM every morning.”
This is the canonical blackout case. Standard velvet will help, but 85% isn’t enough against direct early sun — you need the blackout option for proper sleep.
Baby’s room or nursery
“She needs darkness for naps and bedtime.”
Babies sleep better in true darkness. Don’t compromise here — choose blackout velvet, and mount the rod high so the top doesn’t leak light.
Home office · lots of video calls
“I get screen glare all afternoon.”
You don’t need darkness — you need to kill the glare while keeping ambient light. Standard velvet is perfect; choose a mid-tone colour that doesn’t bounce light back at your screen.
Apartment with bright streetlights at night
“The streetlamp shines straight into my bedroom.”
Even a 90% block leaves enough light to keep you semi-awake. For artificial light at night, only true blackout works — pair blackout velvet with a high-mounted track and oversized panels.
One more thing: velvet does more than block light
Worth noting because it changes the value equation. The same dense pile that blocks light also insulates against heat (keeping the room cooler in Indian summers), dampens sound from busy streets, and gives the room a richer, quieter feel. Compared to dedicated blackout polyester — which only does the light job — velvet earns its place in the room three times over.
Shop the right level
Premium Velvet Curtains — Standard or Blackout
The same heavyweight velvet in 13 considered shades — choose standard (~80%) for living rooms, or blackout (~99%) for bedrooms and nurseries.