Chenille Jacquard GSM Guide: 300gsm vs 350gsm for Upholstery Buyers
Published by Jacquard Works | June 2026
Introduction
For upholstery brands, furniture manufacturers, and interior designers sourcing chenille jacquard at scale, fabric weight — measured in grams per square metre (GSM) — is one of the most consequential specification decisions in the procurement process. It directly affects hand feel, structural performance, cut-and-sew behaviour, and end-product positioning. This guide provides a technical comparison of 300gsm and 350gsm chenille jacquard constructions to help B2B buyers match fabric weight to application requirements and production constraints.
1. What GSM Means in Chenille Jacquard Construction
GSM (grams per square metre) is a standardised measure of fabric mass density. In chenille jacquard, GSM is determined by yarn count, pile density, ground weave structure, and the ratio of chenille yarn to base yarn. A higher GSM does not simply mean a heavier fabric — it reflects a denser pile, tighter interlacing, and typically a more substantial hand feel and improved abrasion resistance.
Chenille yarn itself — a tufted, caterpillar-like yarn with a soft, velvety pile — contributes disproportionately to GSM relative to its visual footprint. This means that two fabrics with similar pattern complexity can differ significantly in weight depending on pile height, yarn twist, and weave density. For procurement teams, GSM is therefore a proxy for both tactile quality and structural durability.
- Pattern fidelity: Higher GSM chenille jacquards maintain sharper motif definition due to denser pile packing, which is critical for complex botanical or medallion patterns.
- Drape behaviour: Lower GSM fabrics drape more fluidly, making them better suited to drapery and soft furnishing applications where hang and movement matter.
- Cut stability: Higher GSM fabrics resist fraying and distortion during cutting and sewing, reducing waste in high-volume upholstery production.
Our Teal Rust Floral Rose Chenille Jacquard at 300gsm and Beige Vine Floral Chenille Jacquard at 350gsm illustrate how the same chenille jacquard construction category performs differently across these weight classes.
2. 300gsm vs 350gsm: Technical Comparison
300gsm Chenille Jacquard
At 300gsm, chenille jacquard fabrics offer a lighter, more fluid construction that retains the characteristic soft pile surface while delivering improved drape and flexibility. The reduced pile density makes these fabrics particularly well-suited to applications where hang, movement, and layering are priorities — including decorative drapery, cushion covers, and lightweight decorative panels.
- Hand feel: Soft, plush pile with a slightly more supple body than heavier constructions; less stiff off the roll.
- Drape: Superior fluid drape; recommended for curtain panels, window treatments, and decorative throws.
- Abrasion resistance: Suitable for light-use upholstery and decorative applications; not recommended for high-traffic seating without backing.
- Cut-and-sew: Easier to handle in apparel and accessories production; requires careful tension management to avoid pile distortion.
Our Teal Rust Floral Rose Chenille Jacquard at 300gsm demonstrates this weight class: a 100% polyester chenille construction at 145cm width with a floral rose pattern in teal and rust — well-suited to drapery manufacturing, cushion cover OEM, and fashion accessories production.
350gsm Chenille Jacquard
At 350gsm, chenille jacquard fabrics deliver a denser, more structured construction with a pronounced three-dimensional pile surface. The increased mass reflects a higher pile density and tighter ground weave, resulting in improved dimensional stability, better pattern definition, and greater resistance to deformation under load — characteristics that matter in upholstered furniture, decorative panels, and structured apparel.
- Hand feel: Rich, substantial pile with a firm body; the fabric holds its shape well off the roll and after cutting.
- Drape: Structured drape with good body; suitable for upholstery panels, folding screens, and decorative room dividers.
- Abrasion resistance: Higher pile density improves surface durability; appropriate for light-to-medium upholstery applications with standard backing.
- Cut-and-sew: Stable and predictable in production; pattern repeat accuracy is maintained across cuts due to denser interlacing.
Our Beige Vine Floral Chenille Jacquard at 350gsm represents this weight class: a 100% polyester chenille construction at 145cm width with a vine floral pattern in classic beige — suited to upholstered furniture OEM, decorative panel production, and structured drapery manufacturing.
Comparison
| 300gsm Chenille Jacquard | 350gsm Chenille Jacquard | |
|---|---|---|
| Surface | Soft, plush pile; slightly lighter visual depth | Dense, raised pile; pronounced three-dimensional motif |
| Hand feel | Supple, fluid; less body off the roll | Substantial, firm; holds shape after cutting |
| Martindale | Suitable for decorative / light-use upholstery; specify backing for seating | Better suited to light-medium upholstery; confirm with supplier for seating spec |
| Typical GSM | 300gsm | 350gsm |
| Best for | Drapery, cushion covers, fashion accessories, lightweight decorative panels | Upholstered furniture OEM, decorative panels, folding screens, structured drapery |
| Price point | Lower material cost per metre; suitable for mid-range decorative applications | Higher material cost per metre; justified for premium upholstery and structured end products |
3. Buyer QC Checklist
Weight Verification
- Request lab-tested GSM certificate or in-house test report from supplier before bulk order confirmation.
- Weigh a 10cm × 10cm swatch sample and calculate GSM independently to verify against stated specification.
- Confirm GSM tolerance range (typically ±5%) is acceptable for your end-product specification.
Pile Integrity & Surface Quality
- Inspect pile direction consistency across the full roll width — uneven pile lay indicates loom tension issues.
- Check for pile crushing, bald spots, or pattern dropout at selvedge edges, which are common in lower-density constructions.
- Assess pile recovery after compression: press a folded section firmly for 10 seconds and observe recovery time.
Pattern Repeat & Colour Consistency
- Measure pattern repeat length and width across three points on the roll; deviation greater than 3mm per metre indicates loom calibration issues.
- Compare colour under D65 (daylight) and TL84 (retail) lighting conditions to identify metamerism risk.
- Request a minimum 3-metre pre-production sample for colour sign-off before bulk production release.
Conclusion
For most decorative drapery and soft furnishing applications, 300gsm chenille jacquard provides sufficient pile density with better drape and lower material cost; for upholstered furniture, structured panels, and applications requiring dimensional stability under load, 350gsm is the more appropriate specification. Confirm GSM with a physical test report and request pre-production samples before committing to bulk volume.
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