100% Organic Cotton Fabric | Make + Believe | Woodland Wanderers - Settled Pheasants | 112cm Wide
Settled Pheasants is part of the Woodland Wanderers collection by Sarah Payne for Make + Believe. This design brings together pheasants, bees and delicate floral details, all set against a light green background that gives the print a fresh countryside feel.
Inspired by Sarah Payne’s acrylic paintings and reimagined as a digital fabric print, this fabric captures the character of rural landscapes and wildlife. Produced on 100% organic cotton and Oeko-Tex certified, it is soft, breathable and versatile — ideal for quilting, dressmaking, home décor and a variety of creative sewing projects.
Key Features
- From the Woodland Wanderers collection by Make + Believe
- Designed by Sarah Payne
- Inspired by original acrylic artwork
- Features pheasants, bees and floral elements on a light green background
- 100% organic cotton
- Oeko-Tex certified
- Approx. 112cm wide
- Approx. 148GSM
Washing Instructions:
We recommend testing a small piece before full use.
Cutting & Ordering Information:
Our fabrics are sold by the half metre (50cm x full fabric width). If you order more than one unit, your fabric will be supplied in a continuous length, unless you request otherwise.
Examples:
- If you order 1 unit, you will receive 0.5 metres x fabric width.
- If you order 2 units, you will receive 1 metre x fabric width.
- If you order 4 units, you will receive 2 metres x fabric width.
We always cut fabric as a single continuous piece (e.g., 2.5m, 3m, etc.), unless you specifically ask for it to be cut into smaller pieces. Please contact us at checkout if you’d like separate cuts.
What You Can Make:
Please note that if more than one piece of fabric is ordered it will come as one continuous piece as it is cut from the roll, however the rolls do have a maximum length therefore larger orders may be sent in multiple pieces.
While every care has been taken to ensure the accuracy of the colours depicted in our images, please be aware that due to monitor resolution, lighting, photo processing software and other factors it is almost impossible to represent colour to 100% accuracy.