Upholstery Fabric Weight Explained: GSM Guide for Furniture Manufacturers
Published by Jacquard Works | July 2026
Introduction
For furniture manufacturers and upholstery buyers, fabric weight — measured in grams per square metre (GSM) — is one of the most consequential specification variables in a sourcing decision. It directly governs abrasion resistance, structural recovery, seam integrity, and long-term appearance retention. This guide explains how to read GSM in the context of woven jacquard and chenille jacquard upholstery fabrics, what weight ranges suit which end-use categories, and how to apply that knowledge to your QC and procurement workflow.
1. What GSM Measures — and What It Doesn't
GSM (grams per square metre) quantifies the mass of a fabric per unit area. In woven upholstery textiles, higher GSM generally correlates with denser yarn packing, greater pile depth in chenille constructions, and improved resistance to deformation under load. However, GSM is a composite metric: it reflects yarn count, weave density (picks per cm), pile height, and fibre blend simultaneously. Two fabrics at 350gsm can perform very differently depending on whether the weight comes from a tight flat-weave structure or a deep chenille pile.
For B2B specification purposes, GSM should always be read alongside Martindale abrasion rating, fibre composition, and construction type (flat jacquard vs. chenille jacquard vs. brocade). A 280gsm flat polyester-cotton jacquard with 30,000 Martindale cycles may outperform a 400gsm chenille in high-traffic seating if the chenille pile is loosely anchored.
- Weight ≠ durability alone: Weave structure and yarn twist are equally determinative of abrasion performance.
- Weight affects drape: Heavier fabrics (380gsm+) resist sagging on loose cushion covers but may be too stiff for tight-upholstered curved forms.
- Weight affects cut yield: Higher GSM reduces linear metres per kg, directly impacting landed cost per chair or sofa unit.
2. GSM Ranges by Upholstery End-Use
Light-Duty Decorative (250–320gsm)
Fabrics in this range are suited to accent chairs, headboards, decorative cushions, and low-traffic residential seating. The lower mass allows for better drape on curved forms and reduces fabric fatigue at staple lines. Chenille jacquards in this range typically feature a shorter pile and tighter ground weave, which improves dimensional stability during upholstery pulling.
- Typical Martindale: 15,000–25,000 cycles
- Best for: Residential accent pieces, hospitality bedroom furniture, decorative cushion covers
- Risk: Insufficient for dining chairs or armrests with sustained contact pressure
Our Multicolor Diamond Medallion Chenille Jacquard at 273gsm is representative of this category — a polyester-cotton chenille with a refined surface suited to decorative upholstery and cushion applications where pattern clarity takes priority over heavy-duty wear.
Mid-Weight Contract (340–400gsm)
This is the primary specification range for commercial upholstery — dining chairs, office seating, hotel lounge furniture, and residential sofas with moderate daily use. Chenille jacquards in this band carry sufficient pile density to maintain pattern definition after repeated compression cycles, while remaining workable on standard upholstery frames without excessive bulk at seam intersections.
- Typical Martindale: 25,000–50,000 cycles (construction-dependent)
- Best for: Contract dining, hotel lounge, residential sofas, office task chairs
- Key spec check: Confirm pile anchoring method (woven-in vs. tufted) — woven chenille pile is significantly more durable under abrasion
Our Burgundy Bohemian Mandala Chenille Jacquard at 380gsm and Cream Persian Star Chenille Jacquard at 386gsm sit squarely in this range, offering the density and pattern complexity expected in mid-to-upper contract specifications.
Heavy-Duty Upholstery (400gsm+)
Fabrics above 400gsm are specified for high-traffic public seating, transport upholstery, and premium residential pieces where longevity and structural integrity over a 10+ year lifecycle are primary requirements. At this weight, chenille jacquards typically feature a denser ground weave and heavier pile yarn, which increases resistance to pile crushing and surface abrasion. The trade-off is reduced flexibility — these fabrics require more experienced upholstery labour to execute tight corners and compound curves cleanly.
- Typical Martindale: 40,000–100,000 cycles (verify per SKU)
- Best for: Airport and transit seating, high-traffic hospitality, premium residential statement pieces
- Handling note: Pre-cut pattern matching is critical — heavier fabrics have less give and pattern repeat errors are difficult to correct post-stapling
Our Baroque Scroll Chenille Jacquard at 390gsm approaches this threshold, with a dense scroll construction that delivers strong surface definition and pile resilience for premium upholstery applications.
Comparison: GSM Ranges at a Glance
| Light-Duty (250–320gsm) | Mid-Weight Contract (340–400gsm) | Heavy-Duty (400gsm+) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Typical end-use | Accent chairs, cushions, headboards | Dining, hotel lounge, residential sofas | Transit, high-traffic hospitality, premium residential |
| Martindale (typical) | 15,000–25,000 | 25,000–50,000 | 40,000–100,000 |
| Drape | Good — suits curved forms | Moderate — workable on standard frames | Stiff — requires skilled labour on curves |
| Pile crush resistance | Lower | Medium–High | High |
| Cut yield (m/kg) | Higher — lower landed cost per unit | Mid-range | Lower — higher landed cost per unit |
| Pattern repeat risk | Low | Medium | High — pre-plan cutting layout |
3. Buyer QC Checklist: Specifying by GSM
Pre-Order Specification
- Confirm GSM via mill test report or third-party lab certificate — do not rely on nominal values alone
- Request construction breakdown: ground weave picks/cm, pile yarn count, fibre blend by weight percentage
- Verify width (145cm vs. 150cm) — affects pattern repeat yield and cutting plan
- Confirm Martindale rating at the specified GSM, not a generic range
Sampling & Approval
- Request a minimum 50cm strike-off for hand-feel, pile direction, and colour accuracy assessment
- Test drape on your frame profile before bulk approval — heavier fabrics behave differently on tight-radius corners
- Check pile direction consistency across the full width — chenille pile can vary at selvedge edges
- Assess pattern repeat accuracy: measure repeat at centre and both selvedges
Bulk Inspection
- Spot-check GSM on 3–5 rolls per shipment using a fabric scale and 100cm² cutter
- Inspect for pile crushing on rolled vs. folded storage — heavy chenille should be roll-packed, not folded
- Verify colour consistency across dye lots — request dye lot certificates for multi-roll orders
- Check selvedge integrity: loose selvedge threads indicate tension issues during weaving that may affect dimensional stability
Conclusion
GSM is a reliable starting point for upholstery fabric specification, but it must be read in conjunction with construction type, Martindale rating, and fibre composition to make a defensible procurement decision. For most contract upholstery applications, the 340–400gsm chenille jacquard range offers the best balance of durability, workability, and cost efficiency — and that is where the majority of Jacquard Works' upholstery catalogue is concentrated.
Browse our full range at Jacquard Works.




