Jyll Mackie x TWOPAGES Cotton Patterned Table Runner
Jyll Mackie x TWOPAGES Cotton Patterned Table Runner
- Interior Designer Style
- Customizable
- Artistic Prints
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Jyll Mackie
"As a mom of three renovating our 1970s home on a budget, I’ve learned that beauty often lies in simplicity and intention. I’ve always loved Indian block prints — their timeless rhythm, their imperfect charm — and I wanted to create something that felt both classic and personal.
This collection was inspired by my daughters’ shared bedroom — I wanted something sweet yet sophisticated, a design that could grow with them and feel at home anywhere in the house. The warm neutrals and soft prints bring that sense of calm and coziness I try to infuse into every space we create."
FAQs
Measure the length of your table first, then decide whether you want the runner to hang over the ends or sit within the tabletop edges. For a classic dining table runner look, allow about 6–12 inches of drop on each end. For a modern casual look, choose a shorter runner that stays inside the table edges.
We offer 5 versatile table runner sizes designed for dining tables, coffee tables, consoles, sideboards, and kitchen islands:
14” × 51” | 14” × 72” | 14” × 90” | 18” × 90” | 18” × 108”
If you need a table runner for an extra-long dining table, oversized kitchen island, narrow console, coffee table, or unique surface, please contact our customer service team with your preferred dimensions for custom sizing.
Yes. Many customers layer a table runner with placemats for everyday dining or place it over a tablecloth for a more formal setting. This layered look works especially well for holidays, dinner parties, Thanksgiving, Christmas, spring brunches, and family gatherings.
For most cotton, linen-blend, or polyester-blend table runners, iron on the reverse side with low-to-medium heat. For printed or velvet table runners, avoid ironing directly on the printed or velvet face; gently steam the reverse side to help release creases.
Neutral Theme
Less is more. In the context of interior design, neutral means without color. Neutrals such as beige, ivory, taupe, black, gray, and shades of white appear to be without color. but in many applications these hues often have undertones. Be aware of these underlying tones as you match colors. Neutral colors are muted shades that appear to lack color but often have underlying hues that change with different lighting. To some extent, blacks, browns, tans, golds, and beige are considered warm. Cooler colors, on the other hand, are white, ivory, silver, and gray.