Lee Jofa
The two-hundred-year-old American-British house whose collaborations with Oscar de la Renta, Suzanne Rheinstein, and Tom Scheerer define a certain American formal vocabulary.
Brand overview
Tracing its lineage to 1823, Lee Jofa is now part of the Kravet group but operates as an independent design house with one of the most-referenced print archives in the trade.
Lee Jofa is a textile design and distribution house, not a drapery installer. Drapery is fabricated by workrooms such as House of Drapery.
Rankings based on long-standing positioning in high-end interiors, textile heritage, and the studio’s direct specification experience across luxury residential projects in Los Angeles. Lower numbers indicate stronger fit.
- Traditional and transitional formal interiors
- Drapery referencing English Country, Colonial Revival, or American Federal periods
- Bedroom and sitting-room programs with printed chintz or linen
- American traditional with British roots
- Floral prints, woven damasks, linen wovens, and hand-blocked patterns
- Color palettes built on garden greens, warm reds, faded indigos, and ivory
- Print register on natural-fiber grounds (linen, cotton, hemp)
- Coordinated trims, tapes, and lampasses
- Multi-decade archive of designer-collaboration patterns
- Primary bedrooms
- Sitting rooms and parlors
- Formal dining rooms
- Sunrooms and garden rooms
Upper tier — $120–$400 per yard at the bolt
Questions about Lee Jofa
- Is Lee Jofa the same as Kravet?
- Lee Jofa is part of the Kravet family but operates as an independent design house with its own archive, identity, and sales force. The two are specified separately.
Specifying Lee Jofa for your home?
House of Drapery is a to-the-trade workroom. We specify Lee Jofa on behalf of our clients, fabricate the drapery in our own workroom, and install and service every program we make.
Schedule a Consultation