How to Spec Jacquard Fabric for Contract Furniture: A Buyer's Guide
Published by Jacquard Works | April 2026
Introduction
Specifying upholstery fabric for contract furniture involves more than selecting a pattern. Buyers must evaluate construction type, weight, abrasion resistance, and fiber composition against end-use performance requirements. This guide covers the two most commercially relevant jacquard constructions for contract seating and case goods — chenille jacquard and cotton-poly jacquard — with technical benchmarks and a QC checklist for procurement teams.
1. Understanding Jacquard Construction for Contract Use
Jacquard weaving produces pattern directly within the fabric structure rather than through surface printing or embossing. This means the design is structurally integrated, offering superior pattern durability under repeated use and cleaning cycles — a critical requirement for contract-grade upholstery.
For contract furniture applications, two construction families dominate: chenille jacquard, which uses chenille yarn as the pile element to produce a soft, textured surface; and cotton-poly jacquard, which uses spun or filament yarn in a flat or semi-structured weave for a cleaner, more graphic result. Each has distinct performance profiles suited to different end-use environments.
- Pattern permanence: Woven-in design resists fading, peeling, and wear that surface-applied finishes cannot match.
- Dimensional stability: Multi-layer jacquard structures maintain shape under tension during upholstery application.
- OEM flexibility: Both construction types support custom colorways, yarn composition, and repeat dimensions at the manufacturing stage.
Our Luxury Chenille Jacquard at 350gsm and Abstract Brushstroke Cotton-Poly Jacquard at 430gsm represent both construction families at contract-appropriate weights.
2. Chenille Jacquard vs. Cotton-Poly Jacquard: Construction Comparison
Chenille Jacquard
Chenille jacquard uses chenille yarn — a pile yarn with short fibres radiating from a twisted core — as the primary face yarn. When woven on a jacquard loom, the result is a fabric with a raised, velvety surface texture and strong visual depth. The pile structure contributes to softness and acoustic dampening, making it well-suited for hospitality seating, lounge chairs, and residential-grade contract pieces.
- Abrasion resistance: Typically 25,000–40,000 Martindale cycles at 350gsm; pile recovery is a key QC variable.
- Pilling risk: Higher than flat-woven constructions; specify anti-pill treatment or polyester-core chenille for high-traffic applications.
- Colorway depth: Yarn-dyed chenille produces rich, saturated tones with low metamerism risk.
Our Luxury Chenille Jacquard at 350gsm and Baroque Chenille Jacquard at 300gsm cover light-luxury and mid-weight contract specifications respectively.
Cotton-Poly Jacquard
Cotton-poly jacquard uses a blended spun yarn — typically 50–70% polyester with cotton — woven in a flat or semi-structured jacquard structure. The result is a fabric with a cleaner surface, crisper pattern definition, and higher dimensional stability than chenille constructions. The polyester component improves abrasion resistance and reduces shrinkage, while cotton contributes breathability and a natural hand feel.
- Abrasion resistance: 40,000–80,000+ Martindale cycles depending on yarn count and weave density; suitable for high-traffic commercial seating.
- Pattern clarity: Flat weave structure allows finer repeat resolution and sharper geometric or graphic designs.
- Maintenance: Generally easier to clean than chenille; lower pile-related soiling risk in commercial environments.
Our Abstract Brushstroke Cotton-Poly Jacquard at 430gsm is engineered for heavy-duty upholstery with a contemporary pattern profile.
Comparison
| Chenille Jacquard | Cotton-Poly Jacquard | |
|---|---|---|
| Surface | Raised pile, textured, soft | Flat to semi-structured, crisp |
| Hand feel | Plush, velvety | Smooth, firm, breathable |
| Martindale | 25,000–40,000 cycles | 40,000–80,000+ cycles |
| Typical GSM | 300–400gsm | 380–500gsm |
| Best for | Hospitality seating, lounge, residential contract | High-traffic commercial, office, healthcare |
| Price point | Mid to premium | Mid (higher abrasion value per cost) |
3. Buyer QC Checklist
Weight & Construction Verification
- Confirm GSM via lab test (ASTM D3776 or ISO 3801) on production sample, not reference swatch.
- Verify weave structure matches specification: chenille pile vs. flat jacquard.
- Check width consistency across roll ends (tolerance: ±1.5%).
Abrasion & Durability
- Request Martindale test report (EN ISO 12947-2) at specified cycle count.
- For chenille: inspect pile recovery after abrasion — no matting or bald patches at rated cycles.
- For cotton-poly: confirm pilling rating (ISO 12945-2) ≥ Grade 4 for commercial use.
Color & Pattern Consistency
- Assess colorfastness to light (ISO 105-B02) and rubbing (ISO 105-X12): minimum Grade 4 for contract.
- Check pattern repeat accuracy across roll width and length — tolerance ±3mm for geometric repeats.
- Inspect for yarn-dye lot consistency across bulk rolls; request dye lot documentation.
Upholstery Suitability
- Confirm fabric passes relevant flammability standard for destination market (e.g., BS 5852, Cal TB 117-2013, EN 1021).
- Test seam slippage (ASTM D4034 or EN ISO 13936) — critical for tight upholstery applications.
- Evaluate dimensional stability after wet cleaning if contract specification requires cleanability.
Conclusion
Chenille jacquard and cotton-poly jacquard serve distinct performance tiers in contract upholstery: select chenille for tactile quality and aesthetic depth in moderate-traffic environments, and cotton-poly for abrasion-critical commercial applications where maintenance ease and pattern clarity take priority. Confirm all specifications against production samples before bulk commitment.
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