Harvest Star · grasscloth · geometric star weave

Sand Grasscloth Wallpaper

Close-up of Harvest Star sand grasscloth wallpaper showing tri-axial star weave in warm golden tan with flat natural reed strips at 60-degree angles
Harvest Star — tri-axial star weave sand grasscloth in warm golden tan, produced with our partner mills to Grasscloths studio specification.

Harvest Star brings a tri-axial star pattern to the sand grasscloth wallpaper category, its flat natural reed strips woven at sixty-degree angles to form repeating pinwheel motifs across a warm golden-tan ground. The bold geometry is matte, tactile, and entirely structural: no printing, no embossing, just the weave doing the visual work at every scale. Supplied to interior designers and trade buyers through our partner mills, with custom colourways engineered by our in-house design studio from 50 rolls.

Reading the Star at Distance and Up Close: How the Tri-Axial Weave Builds Presence

  • Reed strips run across three axes simultaneously, locking at 60-degree intersections to produce a repeating six-pointed star and hexagon field across the full surface.
  • At close range, individual strips reveal cream ivory cores with amber-brown edges and visible lengthwise grain, a dimensional quality that a printed geometric wallpaper cannot replicate.
  • From two to three metres the geometry sharpens into crisp stars reading as a bold, consistent repeat across a full-height wall.
  • No dominant vertical or horizontal axis: the 60-degree structure distributes visual weight evenly, preventing the wall from reading as directional.
  • Matte surface means the pattern reads as pure texture at every viewing angle, with no reflected glare to compete with it.

A tri-axial weave runs strips of flat natural reed across three axes simultaneously, locking at sixty-degree angles to generate repeating star and hexagon motifs across the entire surface. At close range the individual strips reveal their fibre grain: pale cream ivory cores with amber-brown edges, creating a dimensional quality that a printed geometric wallpaper cannot replicate. Step back two or three metres and the geometry sharpens; crisp six-pointed stars emerge across the field, reading as a bold, even repeat with the pattern confidence of a traditional geometric and the warmth and slight irregularity of a hand-harvested natural fibre. On a full-height feature wall the repeat stacks cleanly, and on a full room wrap the motif circulates without any single axis dominating the eye.

Sand grasscloth wallpaper with tri-axial star weave on a grand hotel lobby feature wall, warm afternoon light on travertine floor and brass pendants
Harvest Star on a full-height hotel lobby feature wall, travertine and brass — styled visualization.

Warm Tan in Shifting Light: How This Sand Grasscloth Ground Evolves Through the Day

  • Under cool north light: the ground pulls toward pale straw, cream ivory tones dominant, the surface reading soft and restrained.
  • Under warm afternoon sun: amber-brown secondary tones advance, weave shadows deepen, the palette settling into a honey warmth.
  • Under warm artificial evening light: the amber notes press forward, giving the wall enclosure and richness.
  • Matte finish absorbs rather than reflects light throughout, with no hot spots at any time of day.
  • The warm undertone means this sand grasscloth reads consistently under both natural daylight and incandescent-spectrum artificial light.

In cool northern light the golden-tan ground pulls toward pale straw, the cream ivory of the lighter reed strips more apparent, the surface reading as quiet and composed. As afternoon sun crosses the wall, the amber-brown secondary tones emerge; weave shadows deepen and the overall palette settles into a honey warmth that suits a room gaining energy in the second half of the day. Under warm evening light from a pendant or floor lamp, the surface grows richer still, the amber notes advancing to give the sand grasscloth a quality of being lit from within. Throughout all of this, the matte finish holds without glare, ensuring the geometric pattern reads as texture rather than reflection at every hour.

Mid-century modern living room with sand grasscloth star weave feature wall, low linen sofa and arc brass floor lamp under golden-hour light
Harvest Star as a residential living-room feature wall, warm oak and linen in golden-hour light — styled visualization.

Hotel Lobbies, Living Rooms, and Dining Tables: Where Bold Geometry Finds Its Best Setting

  • Hotel lobby feature walls: the bold star repeat commands the arrival experience at exactly the scale it was designed to read.
  • Hotel suite headwalls and sitting-area feature walls: the warm tan anchors a neutral scheme without requiring additional pattern.
  • Residential living rooms: the geometric repeat functions as the primary focal anchor, freeing the furniture arrangement to stay simple.
  • Dining rooms: the amber tones advance under evening lighting, making a table feel enclosed and considered.
  • Sand grasscloth wallpaper in this structure is compatible across contemporary, mid-century, and japandi-influenced interiors.

The scale and geometric confidence of this star weave make it most effective where a wall has room to perform. In a hotel lobby it commands the arrival experience: a full-height feature wall behind reception or along a principal corridor gives guests an immediate sense of considered materiality. In a residential living room it anchors a scheme that might otherwise rely on art to provide a focal point; the geometric repeat does that work, freeing the furniture arrangement to stay simple. Dining rooms benefit from the warmth: the amber tones advance under evening light, making a table feel enclosed and intentional. At the hospitality scale, guestroom headwalls and suite sitting areas are natural fits. Sand grasscloth wallpaper in this structure sits equally well in contemporary, mid-century, and japandi-influenced interiors.

Japandi dining room wrapped in warm tan sand grasscloth with geometric star weave, round bleached-oak table and linen chairs in diffused north light
Harvest Star wrapping a japandi dining room, bleached oak and linen under diffused north daylight — styled visualization.

Brass, Oak, and Travertine: A Companion Palette for a Warm Geometric Wall

  • Pale oak joinery and flooring echo the reed fibre quality; the tonal proximity reads as a designed relationship rather than a coincidence.
  • Travertine and warm limestone floors ground the palette without competing, their vein-tones mirroring the amber-brown secondary colours in the weave.
  • Brass and aged bronze hardware reinforces the amber notes already present in the reed strips.
  • Linen and bouclé textiles contribute softness while maintaining the organic character consistent with the wall material.
  • Avoid cool grey stone, bright-white joinery, or polished chrome — these counteract the warmth; warm plaster, off-white limewash, and natural clay finishes are the right alternatives.

The warm golden-tan ground reads most naturally against materials that share its warmth and visible grain. Pale oak joinery and flooring echo the reed fibre quality; the tonal proximity reads as a designed relationship. Travertine and warm limestone floors ground the palette without competing: the vein-tones in the stone mirror the amber-brown secondary colours already present in the weave. Brass and aged bronze hardware reinforces those amber notes and adds a material counterpoint to the all-natural surface. Linen and bouclé textiles contribute softness while keeping the organic character consistent across a scheme. Avoid cool grey stone, bright-white joinery, or polished chrome; these counteract the warmth rather than complement it. Warm plaster, off-white limewash, and natural clay finishes are the right alternatives. Love this star structure but need it in a driftwood grey or a deeper cognac amber? Our design studio engineers custom colourways from your colour reference against the same tri-axial weave.

Boutique hotel suite headwall in warm sand grasscloth with tri-axial star weave, crisp linen bedding and paired brass sconces in soft morning light
Harvest Star as a hotel suite headwall, linen and brass under soft morning light — styled visualization.

How a Harvest Star Order Comes Together: Sample, Proof, and a Single Dye Lot

  • Paid sample books, cost credited against a confirmed order (up to ten per cent of the order value).
  • Paid proofing quoted upfront; turnaround typically 1–2 weeks for a colour-matched proof.
  • Production on grasscloth materials runs 4–6 weeks from proof approval, produced with our partner mills.
  • Each order ships as a single dye lot with per-batch lot certificates enclosed.
  • Three full-time in-house designers convert colour references into CAD-specified proofs; our founder has been sourcing natural wallcovering since 2018.
  • Roll specification: 0.915 m wide × 5.5 m long, approximately 5 m² per roll; custom colourways from 50 rolls (approximately 250 m²).

Every Harvest Star order follows the same verified sequence. Sample books are paid, with the cost credited against a confirmed order (up to ten per cent of the order value), giving you physical material in hand before any production commitment. When a custom colourway is required, we quote a paid proof upfront so there are no surprises on cost before work begins: turnaround is typically one to two weeks. Production on grasscloth materials runs four to six weeks with our partner mills, working to specifications drawn up by our three full-time in-house designers, who convert colour references and scale adjustments into CAD-specified proofs. Each order ships as a single dye lot with per-batch lot certificates enclosed, supporting your documentation requirements at the specification or installation stage. Our founder has been sourcing and specifying natural wallcovering since 2018; the studio draws on that depth to navigate lead times, material substitutions, and batch consistency on your behalf.

Frequently asked

Will the warm golden-tan colour shift in rooms that receive strong direct sunlight?
All natural reed grasscloth mellows gradually under sustained UV exposure; Harvest Star's warm tan ground can pull slightly cooler over time in a bright south-facing room. Placing the material on walls that receive indirect or diffused light and using window treatments during peak sun hours significantly slows this process. Our guide at /guides/fading-prevention covers mitigation strategies in detail.
The star pattern has a strong geometric repeat — how do seams between drops behave with this weave structure?
The tri-axial weave has no single dominant horizontal or vertical seam-line running through it, which makes drop edges less visually prominent than in a plain tabby weave. Butt joins are standard; an experienced installer will confirm the consistent hang direction from the sample before cutting and will align the geometric repeat across each drop. Reverse-hanging alternate drops is not recommended for a structured geometric pattern.
Can Harvest Star be installed in a powder room or other moderately humid environment?
A powder room with adequate ventilation is generally workable for natural reed grasscloth; rooms with sustained moisture from a shower or laundry cycle are not suitable. Our guide at /guides/humidity-risks outlines the environmental thresholds to consider before specifying in any wet-adjacent space.
Is the tri-axial star structure available in other colourways, such as a cooler grey, a deeper amber, or a bleached driftwood tone?
Yes. Our design studio engineers custom colourways on the same star-weave structure from 50 rolls (approximately 250 m²), beginning with a paid colour proof produced against your reference. Our guide at /guides/custom-colorway walks through the full process step by step.
What are the minimum order quantity, lead time, and payment terms?
Full details on minimum order quantities, proofing fees, production lead times, and payment structure are on our process page at /process.