£1,000 for a curtain that doesn't match what we were advisedTitle
We used Pret a Vivre's Fulham showroom for a bespoke voile curtain, track and professional fitting in our living room. The total came to over £1,000 — for a single window.
The experience started well. We visited twice, explained exactly what we wanted (a light, white-toned voile, often stacked to one side), and trusted the team's guidance. On our second visit our original consultant wasn't available; we were assured her colleague could advise us just as well. We changed the fabric based on that advice.
The problems started on installation day:
• The colour is far more yellow than expected. The small swatch we were given didn't represent how the fabric would look once made up and stacked — which is exactly how we told them it would sit most of the time. It completely clashes with our living room.
• The curtain was made shorter than originally discussed, leaving a visible gap at the bottom that makes it look cheap.
• The Silent Gliss track had noticeable resistance, unlike the smooth demo in the showroom.
When we raised these issues, the company offered to split the cost of a length alteration — meaning we'd pay an extra £187 on top of the original £1,000. As for the colour, which was our main concern, they refused to do anything. Their position: "the product was delivered to specification." The director then told us he considered the matter closed.
The whole reason you pay a premium for a bespoke curtain service is the expert advice. We didn't pick this fabric on our own — we relied on their recommendations. When the result doesn't work, hiding behind the signed order feels like the opposite of good customer service.
We're now left with an expensive curtain that doesn't suit our home and a company unwilling to make it right. If you do use Pret a Vivre, my advice: request the largest possible samples, test them stacked and in every light, and don't rely solely on their guidance.

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