Venetian Blinds South Africa | The Material Guide | Custom Blinds®

Venetian Blinds, South Africa

Venetian Blinds in South Africa

Five materials. Five jobs. The right venetian blind for a Knysna lagoon bedroom is not the right one for a Pretoria study, and a kitchen near the coast needs different specification from a formal lounge. Custom Blinds Shutters & Awnings has supplied venetian blinds across South Africa since 2010, with over 8,000 installations in homes, lodges and offices nationwide. This guide tells you which material belongs in which room, why it matters, and what to specify when you order.

Which venetian blind material is best for South African homes?

  • Plaswood venetian blinds are the default recommendation for most South African rooms, especially anywhere humidity, UV or coastal salt air is a factor. Hunter Douglas engineered Plaswood specifically for South African climate conditions.
  • Aluminium venetian blinds are the most affordable option, ideal for kitchens, bathrooms, and any room where moisture resistance matters more than the look of timber.
  • Aluwood venetian blinds are aluminium slats with a printed wood-grain finish, giving the warmth of wood with the moisture resistance of metal. Best for rooms that want timber aesthetics in humid or coastal locations.
  • Real wood venetian blinds suit dry, climate-controlled rooms in inland cities. They are a style choice, not a default, and should be specified only where humidity stays consistently low.
  • Bamboo venetian blinds work in dry rooms where a natural, sustainable material complements the interior style.

Order any venetian blind online with free delivery anywhere in South Africa, or message us on WhatsApp 076 022 8410 for Garden Route consultation.

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A venetian blind is a single decision dressed as five products. Get the material right, and the blind disappears into the room working quietly for fifteen years. Get it wrong, and you replace it within three.

"I have pulled venetian blinds out of Knysna homes that were three years old, headrail brackets rusted through, slats warped from one wet summer. The customer paid twice. Right material the first time, that blind is still there in fifteen years. The difference between the two is one conversation before you order."
Duncan Kane, Founder, Custom Blinds Shutters & Awnings South Africa

What are venetian blinds and which material suits South African homes?

A venetian blind is a horizontal-slat blind. Slats sit on a ladder string, tilt under wand or cord control, and lift on a cord-locked or wand-locked headrail. Every venetian blind in South Africa works this way. The mechanism is the same across price ranges. The difference is the material the slats are made from, and that single choice determines where the blind belongs.

South Africa runs five venetian materials. Aluminium for affordability and moisture. Plaswood for the default South African room, composite wood-look with Hunter Douglas engineering. Aluwood for wood aesthetics with metal durability. Real wood for the style purist in a dry interior. Bamboo for natural-fibre warmth in low-humidity spaces. Five materials, five jobs. The comparison table below maps them to the rooms and regions where each belongs.

The rule that catches most buyers: if your home is within five kilometres of the South African coast, or if the room sees regular moisture (kitchen, bathroom, laundry), real wood is the wrong answer. Plaswood, aluminium or aluwood are the right ones. This applies to Cape Town, Durban, the Garden Route, and the KwaZulu-Natal coast. Inland Pretoria, Johannesburg, Bloemfontein, and Polokwane homes can run real wood without issue.

The venetian material decision in one minute

The fastest way to choose the right venetian is to match the room to the material. Most South African homes need different blinds in different rooms because conditions vary across a single house. A Knysna lounge facing the lagoon needs different specification from the bedroom at the back of the same house. This table is the decision shortcut Custom Blinds uses with every order.

Material and Room Match

Which venetian material belongs in which South African room

MaterialBest forAvoid inLifespan
AluminiumKitchens, bathrooms, laundries, coastal homes, budget-conscious projectsFormal lounges where a metal look feels cold15+ years
Plaswood (fauxwood)Default for any South African room, especially humid, coastal, north-facingGenuinely nothing, works in every room15+ years
AluwoodBathrooms, kitchens, coastal homes that want a timber aestheticRooms where slight printed-grain texture is visible at close range15+ years
Real woodDry inland living rooms, studies, formal interiors in Gauteng and inland regionsBathrooms, kitchens, anywhere within 5km of the coast10 to 15 years dry conditions
BambooLiving rooms with natural-material interiors, open-plan dry spacesBathrooms, kitchens, coastal homes8 to 12 years dry conditions

Two materials cover most South African homes well. Plaswood handles every room without compromise, including the difficult ones, which is why Custom Blinds Shutters & Awnings recommends it as the default. Aluminium covers the same difficult rooms at a lower price point but with a metal aesthetic some interiors do not want. The other three materials (aluwood, real wood, bamboo) are aesthetic choices made within suitable conditions.

Aluminium venetian blinds: when this is your answer

Aluminium venetian blinds are the most widely fitted venetian blind in South Africa. The slats are formed from rolled aluminium with a powder-coated finish that resists UV, moisture, salt air, and cleaning products. The finish does not fade, peel, or chalk under South African sun the way painted surfaces do. The material does not absorb water, so there is no swelling, warping, or mould growth in humid environments. In a Durban bathroom, a Cape Town kitchen, or a Hermanus beachfront home, aluminium venetians will operate the same in ten years as they did on the day they were installed.

The product comes from Blindquip, the Hunter Douglas manufacturing and distribution brand in South Africa. Blindquip has supplied the trade since 1989, and the materials and hardware are specified for local conditions. The slats are available in 25mm widths for streamlined contemporary windows and 50mm widths for wider openings and bolder profiles. Finishes run from plain matt colours through brushed aluminium to printed woodgrain (the Aluwood range, discussed separately below).

Aluminium is the only venetian material that combines precise light control, moisture resistance, UV stability, and affordability in one specification. For kitchens with cooktop heat, bathrooms with steam, laundry windows that face the prevailing weather, and any room where the buyer wants to spend less without compromising durability, aluminium is the answer. Browse aluminium venetian blinds for full colour ranges, slat-width options, and instant pricing.

When aluminium is the wrong choice: formal living rooms, master bedrooms, and dining rooms where the room palette wants warmth. Aluminium reads as metal at every angle, and even matt finishes do not soften the impression. For these rooms in coastal or humid locations, Plaswood or aluwood are better fits. For these rooms in dry inland locations, real wood is the premium choice.

Plaswood venetian blinds: the default South African venetian

Plaswood is the venetian blind the rest of the world calls fauxwood. The terms refer to the same product: a composite slat made from UV-stabilised PVC blended with wood fibres, formed and finished to look and feel like real timber. The difference is that Plaswood is the brand name used in South Africa, and the product itself was engineered by Hunter Douglas specifically for South African climate conditions. Real wood venetians fail in coastal humidity and high UV. Hunter Douglas built Plaswood from the ground up to handle the conditions that were destroying wood blinds, not to import an existing product and adapt it.

This matters more than it sounds. The composite formulation includes UV stabilisers rated above 500, which is the same standard used in external cladding. The aluminium head rails resist salt corrosion in a way that steel head rails do not. The slat composition handles temperatures from sub-zero through above 40°C without warping. Custom Blinds Shutters & Awnings has installations in Knysna and Plettenberg Bay from 2010 that show no colour fade and no operational issue, fifteen years on. That is the longevity standard the product was built to.

For any South African room where the buyer wants the warmth and grain of real wood but the room is coastal, humid, north-facing, or simply heavily used, Plaswood is the right answer. It is also the right answer for most rooms that are not those things, because the cost difference between Plaswood and lower-tier materials is modest and the durability advantage is decisive. Custom Blinds supplies Plaswood in 50mm slats exclusively, with the full factory five-year warranty. Order Plaswood venetian blinds online with instant pricing by window size.

The terms fauxwood, faux wood venetian, EcoPlas, EcoWood, and synthetic venetian all refer to the same product category. Custom Blinds supplies the genuine Hunter Douglas Plaswood line, not a generic faux wood blind imported from elsewhere.

Aluwood venetian blinds: aluminium with a wood-look finish

Aluwood is the answer to a specific brief. I want my venetians to look like wood, but the room is humid, coastal, or sees daily moisture, and real wood will fail there. An aluwood slat is aluminium at its core with a printed wood-grain finish bonded to the surface. It is not a wood product. It is an aluminium product with a wood aesthetic. The slats handle moisture, UV, and salt air the way aluminium does, because they are aluminium. The visual reads as timber from normal viewing distance, with grain texture, colour variation, and finishes that range from whitewash and blonde oak through to mid-toned chestnut, dark walnut, and mahogany.

This is the most versatile single product in the Custom Blinds venetian range. A Knysna bathroom that wants a Scandinavian-style timber look gets aluwood in pale oak. A Cape Town kitchen with darker cabinetry gets aluwood in walnut. A Hermanus master bedroom that wants the warmth of wood without the coastal-failure risk gets aluwood in chestnut. The material works in any room where real wood would fail and the buyer wants the timber aesthetic at a price below real basswood or oak. Aluwood is lighter than real wood, which also makes it the practical choice for very wide windows where real wood becomes heavy enough to strain the headrail.

The grain pattern is printed rather than naturally varied, which means side-by-side comparison with real wood reveals the difference. From a normal viewing distance in the room, the difference is not visible. Guests rarely notice unless told. For most South African buyers, aluwood is the right call because it solves the practical problems of moisture and durability while delivering 90% of the wood aesthetic at a sensible price.

Aluwood is the most versatile venetian option in the Custom Blinds range. It works in every room real wood does not (bathrooms, kitchens, coastal homes) and most rooms real wood does (living rooms, bedrooms, studies). The two reasons to specify real wood over aluwood are aesthetic purism and inland dry-room interiors where wood will perform reliably.

Real wood venetian blinds: the style choice for dry inland rooms

Real wood venetian blinds use slats milled from basswood, a stable, lightweight hardwood that takes finishes well and resists warping better than most other timbers. Standard slat width is 50mm at 3mm thickness, which is the industry standard for residential installations. Real wood blinds offer two qualities that no synthetic material can replicate: genuine natural grain variation, and acoustic absorption. Timber slats absorb rather than reflect sound, which is noticeable in open-plan rooms with tiled floors. A lounge fitted with real wood venetians feels acoustically softer than the same room with aluminium or Plaswood.

The trade-off is environmental sensitivity. Real wood is the only venetian material that genuinely responds to humidity and moisture. Slats will warp in bathrooms, swell in coastal homes within five kilometres of the ocean, and crack in north-facing windows that see daily direct sun in the Cape or the Garden Route. Custom Blinds does not recommend real wood for any of those rooms. We have no problem fitting real wood in a Pretoria study, a Johannesburg formal lounge, or a Bloemfontein bedroom on the south side of the house. We will not fit it in a Knysna bathroom, and we will tell the buyer why.

Real wood is a style choice within a defined performance window. Inland city homes, climate-controlled interiors, dry rooms with stable humidity. Real wood works well and lasts ten to fifteen years with weekly dusting. Beyond that performance window, aluwood or Plaswood deliver the wood look without the failure risk. Browse wooden venetian blinds for the full finish range, slat options, and ordering.

Custom Blinds order data shows roughly 30% of buyers choose real wood, 40% choose aluwood, and 30% choose Plaswood. The split reflects the realistic application of the rules above. Most South African homes have at least one room where real wood is not the right answer, and most buyers end up with a mix of materials across the house.

Bamboo venetian blinds: natural fibre, dry rooms only

Bamboo venetian blinds use horizontal bamboo slats in place of basswood. Bamboo is technically a grass, not a timber, which makes it one of the fastest-renewing natural materials available. Bamboo grows to harvest in three to five years compared to twenty to fifty for hardwoods, which is why bamboo appears more often in interiors marketed on sustainability credentials. The slats are lighter than real wood, slightly more resistant to heat and humidity, and have a finer, more even grain than basswood. The visual reads as natural timber with a distinctive horizontal grain pattern.

Bamboo venetians work best in rooms with stable, dry conditions and an interior style that suits natural texture. Open-plan living rooms with timber flooring, rattan accents, or a coastal-whitewashed aesthetic all pair well with bamboo. Bedrooms with neutral palettes accept bamboo as a soft natural element. Studies and home offices that want warmth without the formality of stained hardwood often work in bamboo. The colour range runs from pale natural through honey, caramel, chestnut, rosewood, and dark teak finishes, with stain penetrating the grain rather than sitting on top of it.

Bamboo is not appropriate for bathrooms, kitchens, or any room with regular moisture exposure. Like all natural-material venetians, bamboo slats absorb moisture, swell, and eventually warp under sustained humidity. Bamboo also does not handle direct daily UV as well as Plaswood or aluwood. North-facing windows in the Cape or Highveld will see colour drift over five to eight years. For these rooms, Plaswood is the correct synthetic alternative. Browse bamboo venetian blinds for finish options and pricing.

25mm vs 50mm slat width: which to specify

Venetian blinds in South Africa come in two standard slat widths. The decision matters more than it sounds because it affects the visual proportion of the window, the amount of light the closed blind blocks, the stack height when fully raised, and the structural weight of the blind on its headrail. Custom Blinds supplies both widths in aluminium and aluwood, 50mm only in Plaswood and bamboo, and 50mm standard in real wood with 25mm and 35mm as less common alternatives.

Specification

25mm vs 50mm slat width, when to specify each

Slat widthBest forVisual characterStack height
25mmNarrow windows under 1000mm wide, contemporary interiors, office settings, kitchens where a streamlined look mattersStreamlined, technical, modernTaller stack, more slats per drop
50mmWider windows over 1000mm wide, traditional and transitional interiors, formal living rooms, any window where a bolder profile suits the roomBolder, more architecturalShorter stack, fewer slats per drop

The rule of thumb most South African interior designers use: 25mm slats for windows under one metre wide, 50mm slats for windows over one metre wide. This is not absolute, but it captures the visual proportion that reads correctly in most rooms. A 25mm aluminium slat on a wide patio door looks busy and over-detailed. A 50mm Plaswood slat on a narrow bathroom window looks heavy and out of scale. Match the width to the window first, then refine for the room's interior style.

For 50mm slats, decorative ladder tape is available as an upgrade. The tape replaces the plain cord ladder with a woven textile strip that runs vertically through the slat holes, adding a textile detail to a product that is otherwise entirely hard-material. This is a popular upgrade for formal living areas and hospitality settings where the blind doubles as a soft furnishing element.

Venetian blinds for South African coastal homes

Salt air is the single biggest factor in blind failure on the South African coast. It penetrates joinery, corrodes steel components, accelerates UV damage, and creates the kind of persistent humidity that warps timber. If you live within five kilometres of the ocean (anywhere on the Garden Route, KwaZulu-Natal coast, Cape Peninsula, Eastern Cape coast, or Western Cape coast), your venetian blind specification needs to account for this from day one. Specifying the wrong material at the coast does not save money. It costs the same money again, three years later, when the blind needs replacing.

The rules are straightforward. Aluminium slats with powder-coated finish resist salt corrosion. Stainless-steel or polymer headrail brackets do not rust. Synthetic or aluminium-core ladder strings outlast cotton. Avoid painted steel components, untreated timber, and any blind sold without a coastal-specific material note. The cheapest venetians in the market typically fail all four of these tests, which is why they are cheap.

Custom Blinds specifies coastal-grade materials as standard for every Garden Route installation. This is not an upgrade or an optional add-on. It is how we build. After 8,000+ installations since 2010, the firm has worked out what fails at the coast and what lasts. That knowledge is in every venetian blind we supply, whether you order online for delivery anywhere in South Africa or book a home consultation with Duncan locally.

The coastal blind specification that lasts fifteen years: Plaswood or aluminium slats. Aluminium headrail (never steel). Polymer or stainless brackets. Synthetic ladder cord. UV-stable coating rated 500+. This specification is the Custom Blinds default on every Garden Route order. Order from the shop and these materials are what you receive, no upgrade required.

Venetian blind prices in South Africa

Venetian blind prices in South Africa depend on material, slat width, window size, and any operating mechanism upgrades. There is no single price for a venetian blind because there is no single venetian blind. The same window in aluminium, Plaswood, aluwood, real wood, and bamboo will price differently across all five materials. The table below gives a general guide for a standard 1200mm × 1500mm window, the most common residential size in South Africa.

Pricing Guide

Indicative venetian blind prices, 1200mm × 1500mm window

MaterialPrice bandWhat you get
Aluminium 25mmEntry levelPowder-coated aluminium slats, polymer brackets, wand or cord tilt
Aluminium 50mmEntry to midWider slats, more cord-style operation, ladder tape option
Aluwood 25mm or 50mmMid rangeAluminium core with printed wood-grain finish, full colour range
Plaswood 50mmMid to premiumHunter Douglas composite, factory five-year warranty, aluminium headrail
Real wood 50mmPremiumBasswood slats, hand-finished, broader stain range
Bamboo 50mmMid to premiumNatural bamboo slats, sustainable material, distinctive grain pattern

All Custom Blinds venetian blinds are made to your exact window measurements, so the final price is calculated to your specific window when you use the online shop. Enter the width and drop, choose the material and finish, and the calculator returns the delivered price including VAT. There is no quote callback, no hidden charges, and free delivery is included on every order anywhere in South Africa. For an exact price on any venetian blind, measure your window following the measuring guide below, then enter your dimensions on the relevant material page.

For Garden Route clients, Duncan can measure on site. Book a Knysna or Garden Route consultation for in-home advice. There is no charge for the consultation, and the measure-and-quote service is included whether you order or not.

How to measure for venetian blinds

Custom Blinds supplies every venetian blind as made-to-measure. There are no pre-cut sizes, no on-site cutting, and no guesswork. Your measurements drive the manufacturing brief, so accuracy matters. The process is straightforward and takes about ten minutes per window. The full measuring guide covers every scenario; what follows is the essential summary.

Inside-mount (recess fit): measure the window opening width in three places (top, middle, bottom) and use the smallest width. Measure the drop in two places (left and right) and use the smaller drop. The blind will be manufactured to those exact dimensions and fit inside the window recess with minimal clearance. This is the cleanest installation for square, level windows.

Outside-mount (face-fit): measure the window opening width and add 50mm to each side for full light coverage. Measure the desired drop from where the blind will start to where it will end. This installation suits windows with irregular recesses, windows without a recess at all, or windows where extra side coverage is wanted to block light leak.

Every Custom Blinds order is protected by the Custom Fit Guarantee. If a measurement error means the blind does not fit on first installation, we remake it. This applies to first-time buyers and trade customers equally, and it is the reason the firm has held its supplier reputation since 2010.

Frequently asked questions about venetian blinds in South Africa

What is the difference between aluminium and aluwood venetian blinds?

Both products use aluminium slats. The difference is the finish. Aluminium venetian blinds have a plain powder-coated finish in solid colours or brushed metallic textures. Aluwood venetian blinds have a printed wood-grain finish on the same aluminium substrate, giving the slat a timber appearance while retaining the moisture resistance of metal. Aluwood costs slightly more than plain aluminium and is the right choice when the room wants a wood look but cannot accept a real-wood blind.

Are venetian blinds suitable for South African coastal homes?

Yes, with the right material. Plaswood and aluminium venetian blinds are the correct choices for coastal homes within five kilometres of the ocean. Both materials resist salt corrosion, humidity, and UV damage. Real wood and bamboo venetian blinds are not suitable for coastal locations because both materials absorb moisture and warp under sustained salt-air exposure. Custom Blinds specifies coastal-grade aluminium headrails and polymer brackets as standard for every Garden Route installation.

How long do venetian blinds last in South Africa?

Lifespan depends on material and conditions. Aluminium and Plaswood venetian blinds last fifteen years or more in any South African room, including humid and coastal locations. Aluwood lasts the same fifteen-plus years because the substrate is aluminium. Real wood lasts ten to fifteen years in dry inland rooms and three to five years in coastal or humid rooms, which is why we do not recommend real wood for those conditions. Bamboo lasts eight to twelve years in dry rooms with stable humidity.

Can venetian blinds be motorised?

Yes. Custom Blinds offers motorised tilt and lift operation on venetian blinds using Somfy and Coulisse motor systems. The motor sits inside the headrail and operates the slats via remote, wall switch, app, or smart-home integration. Motorisation is available across aluminium, Plaswood, aluwood, real wood, and bamboo venetian blinds. For Garden Route installations, motorisation is supplied and installed locally. Message Duncan on 079 523 5407 for technical advice. For national online orders, motorisation is a configurable upgrade in the online shop. See motorisation options.

What is the price difference between aluminium and Plaswood venetian blinds?

Plaswood venetian blinds are typically 40 to 70 per cent more expensive than aluminium venetian blinds for the same window size, because the Hunter Douglas composite material and the aluminium headrail cost more to manufacture than rolled aluminium slats with a powder-coat finish. The premium reflects the wood-look aesthetic and the engineering specification. For rooms where aluminium is functionally adequate, the lower price is the right choice. For rooms where the wood look matters, Plaswood is worth the difference.

How do I clean venetian blinds?

Cleaning method depends on the material. Aluminium and Plaswood slats wipe clean with a damp microfibre cloth. Aluwood slats clean the same way. The printed finish is sealed and water-resistant. Real wood slats should never be cleaned with water or wet cloths; use a dry microfibre cloth or feather duster with the slats closed. Bamboo slats clean with a dry cloth or soft brush, never water. For deep cleaning across all materials except real wood and bamboo, a mild detergent solution on a damp cloth removes most kitchen and bathroom grime.

Can I order venetian blinds online from Custom Blinds South Africa?

Yes. Every venetian blind in the Custom Blinds Shutters & Awnings range (aluminium, Plaswood, aluwood, real wood, and bamboo) can be ordered online with instant pricing at shop.customblinds.co.za. The shop calculates the price for your exact window dimensions, accepts payment, and arranges delivery anywhere in South Africa free of charge. Every order is protected by the Custom Fit Guarantee, which remakes any blind that does not fit on first installation due to a measurement issue.

Do Custom Blinds South Africa install venetian blinds outside the Garden Route?

National venetian blind orders are shipped as made-to-measure blinds with full installation instructions. Most blinds are owner-installed using basic tools (drill, screwdriver, tape measure), and the kit includes brackets, fixings, and step-by-step instructions. For installations in Johannesburg, Cape Town, Durban, Pretoria, Port Elizabeth, Bloemfontein, and other South African cities, we work with local installers when requested. Professional installation by Duncan is restricted to the Garden Route. For non-GR projects requiring installation, contact the team via WhatsApp 076 022 8410 and we will route you to a suitable local installer.

Right material, first time

Order any venetian blind online with instant pricing and free delivery anywhere in South Africa. For Garden Route installation, message Duncan on WhatsApp for a same-week site consultation.

Custom Blinds® is the trading name of Custom Blinds Shutters & Awnings, a South African manufacturer and supplier of indoor blinds, outdoor blinds, shutters, awnings, shadeports, and screens. Founded by Duncan Kane in Knysna in 2010, the company has completed over 8,000 installations across the Garden Route and nationally through shop.customblinds.co.za. Venetian blinds in the Custom Blinds South Africa range are supplied through the Blindquip and Hunter Douglas manufacturing networks, with materials specified for South African climate conditions including coastal humidity, high UV intensity, and inland temperature variation. Indoor blinds range: All Indoor Blinds | Aluminium Venetian | Plaswood Venetian | Bamboo Venetian | Real Wood Venetian | Venetian Blinds Guide | Shop Online

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