What’s the best blind for a bathroom window — roller, venetian, or something else? How do you stop mould taking hold in Melbourne’s muggy summers? And does it matter whether you’re in Kew, Dandenong, or Pakenham when it comes to choosing the right material? These are the questions we hear every week at Drowell Blinds, and this guide answers all of them — without the fluff.
Bathroom window treatments are genuinely different from every other room in your home. The combination of steam, condensation, direct water splash, cleaning chemicals, and fluctuating temperatures means the blind you choose can either last 15 years or start falling apart in 18 months. If you’re researching bathroom roller blinds in Kew, investigating blinds in Dandenong, or weighing up venetian blinds in Pakenham, this is the complete, no-nonsense resource you’ve been looking for.
We’ve been supplying and installing window furnishings across Melbourne’s south-east for over 20 years, which means we’ve seen every mistake a homeowner can make — and a few the internet hasn’t warned you about yet. Let’s start with what actually matters.
Why Your Bathroom Demands a Specialist Blind (And What Goes Wrong When You Ignore This)
Most homeowners walk into a bathroom renovation and select blinds the same way they would for a lounge room — by looks alone. It’s an understandable mistake, but an expensive one. A standard fabric roller blind that performs beautifully in a bedroom will begin to develop mould within months in a bathroom environment, particularly in Melbourne’s humidity-prone suburbs.
Here’s what’s happening scientifically: every time someone takes a hot shower, the room fills with steam. That steam condenses onto the coolest surfaces available — including your window blind. If your blind is made from a porous material (cotton, standard polyester, real timber), it absorbs that moisture. Over time, this creates a cycle of damp and dry conditions that is the perfect breeding ground for mould and mildew. Colour fades, fabric warps, mechanisms seize up — and you’re back to square one.
The single most important rule for bathroom blinds: the material must be non-porous, or treated with a certified water-repellent coating. Everything else — style, colour, mechanism — comes second.
The specific climate in Kew and inner Melbourne’s east adds another layer of complexity. Kew experiences genuine temperature swings across the seasons: summer humidity, winter condensation on cold windows, and everything in between. Homes in Kew’s older residential streets often feature heritage-style bathroom windows — recessed into thick brick walls, non-standard in size, and sometimes angled in ways that make off-the-shelf blinds a poor fit. This is precisely why custom, made-to-measure solutions are so popular in the area.
Meanwhile, in Dandenong and Pakenham — growth corridors with a mix of established homes and new builds — the challenge is different. Newer bathrooms tend to have larger windows for natural light, which means light control becomes just as important as moisture resistance.
The Complete Material Guide: What Actually Works in a Bathroom
Not all moisture-resistant blinds are created equal. Here’s a frank breakdown of the main material categories, what they’re genuinely good for, and where they fall short.
PVC Roller Blinds
PVC is the gold standard for truly waterproof bathroom blinds. The material is non-porous all the way through — you could submerge a PVC roller blind in water and it would be completely fine when you pulled it out. There are no holes, seams, or fabric weave for mould to colonise. Cleaning is as simple as wiping it down with a damp cloth. For en-suites and main bathrooms with showers, particularly in older Kew homes where ventilation is limited, a PVC roller blind is often the most sensible long-term investment.
The trade-off is aesthetic flexibility. PVC tends to have a more utilitarian appearance than fabric options, though quality ranges vary — premium PVC can look genuinely sleek and contemporary.
Moisture-Resistant Treated Polyester
Vinyl-coated polyester and treated polyester fabrics represent the middle ground between pure PVC and standard fabric. These materials are treated with water-repellent finishes — sometimes nano-coatings — that cause water to bead and roll off rather than soak in. They offer far greater design variety than PVC: more colours, textures, and light-filtering options.
The important caveat: water-repellent is not waterproof. Over years of daily steam exposure, coatings can degrade. For powder rooms or guest bathrooms that see lighter use, treated polyester is an excellent choice. For main bathrooms and en-suites with daily showers, consider PVC or aluminium alternatives.
Aluminium Venetian Blinds
This is where bathroom roller blinds and venetian options truly diverge. Aluminium venetian blinds are moisture-resistant, rust-proof (provided the mechanism uses quality stainless or coated components), and completely mould-proof. They don’t absorb water at all. The adjustable slat design gives you precise light control — useful in bathrooms where you want natural light without sacrificing privacy. They’re particularly popular for bathrooms in Dandenong and Pakenham new builds where the contemporary aesthetic suits the interior design direction.
The maintenance note: aluminium venetian slats require individual cleaning, which takes longer than wiping down a single roller surface. Dust accumulates in the slats, and in a bathroom environment, that dust can become damp and sticky if ventilation is poor.
PVC Venetian Blinds (Faux Timber)
PVC venetians — often sold as “faux timber” or “wood look” — give you the warm aesthetic of timber Venetian blinds without any of the moisture vulnerability. Real timber warps, swells, and eventually cracks when exposed to bathroom humidity. PVC venetians look virtually identical at normal viewing distances, last significantly longer in wet environments, and are available across a wide range of colours and slat widths. For Kew homes with period-style bathrooms where the owner wants a warm, classic look, PVC venetians offer the best of both worlds.
At a Glance: Bathroom Blind Materials Compared
| Material | Waterproof Rating | Mould Resistance | Design Range | Maintenance | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PVC Roller Blind Best | Fully waterproof | Excellent | Limited | Very easy — wipe clean | Main bathrooms, en-suites |
| Treated Polyester Roller Good | Water-resistant | Good | Extensive | Easy | Powder rooms, guest baths |
| Aluminium Venetian Good | Moisture-resistant | Excellent | Moderate | Moderate — slat cleaning | Contemporary new builds |
| PVC / Faux Timber Venetian | Moisture-resistant | Excellent | Good | Moderate — slat cleaning | Heritage & classic interiors |
| Real Timber Venetian | Not recommended | Poor | Excellent | Difficult | Dry areas only |
| Standard Fabric Roller | Not recommended | Poor | Extensive | Difficult | Dry areas only |
Custom-Made vs. Ready-Made: Which Is Right for Your Bathroom in Kew, Dandenong, or Pakenham?
This debate comes up constantly, and the honest answer is that it depends almost entirely on your windows. Let’s cut through it.
When Ready-Made Works Fine
If your bathroom has standard-sized windows — the kinds you’d find in most post-2000 Melbourne builds — ready-made roller blinds from a hardware chain can be a functional, affordable option. You’ll get a decent moisture-resistant fabric, a simple chain mechanism, and a look that works for most neutral bathrooms. Installation is DIY-friendly, and you can have your bathroom covered within a day of purchase.
The limitation is precision. Ready-made blinds come in fixed size increments. In a bathroom, where an imprecise fit means light gaps at the sides and privacy issues, that gap between “close enough” and “perfect” really matters.
When Custom Is Worth Every Dollar
For Kew homeowners in particular, custom is almost always the right call. Many properties in Kew feature original Edwardian or Victorian-era windows — non-standard dimensions, often quite tall and narrow, sometimes arched at the top, and sometimes recessed deeply into masonry walls where standard brackets won’t sit flush. Off-the-shelf blinds will leave gaps, look unfinished, or simply won’t fit at all.
Custom bathroom roller blinds in Kew provide a precise fit measured to the millimetre. You also get full control over fabric choice, chain colour, cassette style, and whether you want the blind to sit inside the recess or face-mount on the architrave. For bathroom roller blinds in Dandenong‘s newer homes with larger format windows, custom sizing means you can use a single wide blind rather than joining two together — a look that’s infinitely more polished.
Our recommendation: If in doubt, measure. If your window doesn’t match a standard size precisely, invest in custom. The cost difference between ready-made and custom is often far smaller than people expect — particularly when you factor in the time and frustration of returns, workarounds, or a bad result that you’ll look at every day for years.
Light Control & Privacy: Getting the Balance Right in the Bathroom
Privacy is the non-negotiable in a bathroom. But privacy doesn’t have to mean a dark, cave-like space. Modern fabric technology has created genuinely clever solutions that most homeowners don’t know about.
Translucent vs. Blockout Roller Blinds
Translucent roller blinds allow diffused natural light to filter through while making it impossible for anyone outside to see the person inside — provided the fabric is correctly specified. Many homeowners assume translucent means visible, but the reality is that quality translucent fabrics scatter light and eliminate direct sight lines, delivering excellent privacy while keeping the bathroom bright and pleasant. For bathroom windows that face a courtyard or a neighbouring property, a quality translucent roller in a PVC or treated polyester fabric is often the ideal solution.
Blockout roller blinds, by contrast, eliminate light almost entirely when closed. These are most useful in bathrooms used at night as well as during the day, or where a window faces directly into a brightly lit outdoor area that creates a “one-way mirror” effect after dark when interior lights are on.
Venetian Blinds and Precise Light Direction
One area where venetian blinds genuinely outperform roller options is directional light control. The adjustable slats of an aluminium or PVC venetian allow you to angle incoming light upward — bouncing it off the ceiling for diffused illumination — while maintaining complete privacy from outside viewing angles. This is particularly useful for bathrooms on ground-floor level in Pakenham or Dandenong properties where the window is at eye level from the street or a neighbour’s property.
Double Roller Blinds: The Best-of-Both Solution
Melbourne’s blind market has seen a surge in double roller blind installations over the past two years, and bathrooms are increasingly part of this trend. A double roller system pairs a translucent screen fabric with a blockout panel behind it, both on separate mechanisms in a single cassette. During the day, the screen provides diffused light and privacy. At night, the blockout rolls down for complete coverage. It’s a genuinely elegant solution for bathrooms in Kew’s well-lit street-facing positions.
Venetian Blinds in Pakenham: Why This Classic Style Is Experiencing a Revival
Pakenham has undergone substantial residential development over the past decade, and with that growth has come a renewed interest in venetian blinds — not as a budget fallback, but as a deliberate design choice. Here’s why.
Contemporary Pakenham homes tend to feature large, light-filled bathrooms with generous window areas. In these spaces, the structured geometry of a venetian blind’s horizontal slats creates a clean, architectural line that complements modern cabinetry and large-format tiles beautifully. Aluminium venetians in particular — available in over 100 powder-coated colours from quality Australian suppliers — can be perfectly colour-matched to tapware, cabinetry hardware, or window frames.
The practical benefits align well with Pakenham’s climate too. The outer south-east of Melbourne experiences genuine summer heat, and venetian slats can be angled to redirect harsh afternoon sun away from the bathroom while keeping the space bright and ventilated. In winter, closing the slats creates an additional layer of insulation against cold glass — a small but meaningful contribution to energy efficiency in a room you’re heating with hot showers every day.
For venetian blinds in Pakenham, the most popular specifications we’re currently fitting include 50mm aluminium slats in matte white or warm grey tones, with stainless steel operating chains for longevity. PVC wood-look venetians in natural timber tones are the second most popular choice, particularly in bathrooms where the rest of the home features timber flooring or Hamptons-style cabinetry.
- 50mm aluminium slats — the most popular size for bathroom windows, fits standard recesses cleanly
- 25mm slimline aluminium — ideal for narrow bathroom windows or where a more minimalist look is desired
- PVC wood-look in natural timber tones — pairs well with warm interior palettes
- Motorised venetian options — increasingly popular for high windows or accessibility requirements
Blinds in Dandenong: Navigating a Diverse Housing Market
Dandenong is one of Melbourne’s most diverse and fast-evolving suburbs, with a housing stock that ranges from post-war brick veneers to modern apartment developments. This diversity means there’s no single “best” blind for Dandenong bathrooms — but there are clear patterns in what works well.
For the older brick-veneer properties that make up much of Dandenong’s residential housing, bathroom windows are often small and high-set — positioned for privacy and ventilation rather than light. In these bathrooms, a simple PVC roller blind in a light neutral tone (white, ivory, or soft grey) does the job efficiently and cost-effectively. The window isn’t a design feature; it’s functional. A clean, moisture-proof blind that’s easy to maintain is exactly what’s needed.
In Dandenong’s newer apartment complexes and townhouse developments — particularly those closer to the activity centres — the story is different. Larger glazed areas, floor-to-ceiling windows in combined bathroom/laundry spaces, and higher-end finishes mean that the blind is now very much part of the bathroom’s aesthetic. This is where we see the strongest demand for custom-fitted bathroom roller blinds in Dandenong with cassette finishes, coordinated chain colours, and designer fabric choices.
Commercial premises in Dandenong — offices, medical practices, retail spaces with bathroom facilities — tend to specify aluminium venetians for the combination of durability, ease of cleaning, and professional appearance. If you’re fitting out a commercial bathroom in the Dandenong area, aluminium venetians in a 50mm slat with a wand-tilt mechanism are the industry standard for good reason.
Drowell Blinds services the entire Dandenong region — from Dandenong South industrial to Dandenong North residential. Our team is based locally and carries stock of the most popular blind specifications for the area. Contact us for a free, no-obligation measure and quote.
Installation: What to Expect and How to Avoid the Most Common Mistakes
Even the best bathroom blind can underperform if it’s incorrectly installed. Here’s what a professional installation should cover — and what to watch for if you’re considering DIY.
Measuring for Bathroom Roller Blinds
The most important measurement in a bathroom is the recess depth. If you’re fitting a blind inside the window recess (which provides the cleanest look and best light control), you need at minimum 70–80mm of depth for the cassette housing. Many older Kew and Dandenong bathroom windows have deep masonry recesses that accommodate this easily. However, some aluminium-framed windows in newer builds have very shallow reveals, requiring a face-mount installation instead.
For roller blinds, measure the width at the top, middle, and bottom of the recess — in older homes, walls aren’t always perfectly square, and using the widest measurement rather than accounting for this discrepancy is a common error that results in a blind that won’t retract properly.
Bracket Placement in Wet Conditions
Standard steel screws and plugs corrode in bathroom humidity. Specify stainless steel fixings wherever possible, and ensure wall plugs are rated for the substrate (masonry, timber stud, or plasterboard — each requires a different anchor type). An improperly fixed blind in a bathroom is a safety hazard as well as an aesthetic problem.
Child Safety Compliance
All window blind installations in Australia must comply with the mandatory safety standard AS/NZS 1873, which requires corded blinds to incorporate child safety devices — either cleats at height, safety tensioners, or breakaway connectors — to prevent strangulation risk. At Drowell Blinds, every installation includes compliant child safety fittings as standard. If you’re purchasing blinds elsewhere and installing them yourself, ensure you understand and comply with these requirements. The ACCC product safety portal provides up-to-date recall information and compliance guidance.
- Measure width at three points — use the narrowest measurement for inside mount
- Check recess depth allows for cassette housing (min. 70–80mm)
- Specify stainless steel chains and fixings in wet areas
- Ensure child safety compliance per AS/NZS 1873
- Confirm ventilation is adequate before closing a blind immediately after shower use
- Leave a 10–15mm clearance below the sill for moisture to escape in high-steam environments
Caring for Your Bathroom Blinds: Making Them Last
With the right material and proper care, quality bathroom blinds should last 10–15 years without significant degradation. Here’s what actually makes the difference.
After Every Shower
The single most impactful habit is ventilation. Even a fully waterproof PVC roller blind benefits from the bathroom being properly ventilated after shower use — either via an exhaust fan or an open window. A blind that dries between uses will outlast one that stays damp indefinitely. If your bathroom lacks adequate ventilation, address that before investing in new blinds.
Regular Cleaning
For PVC roller blinds: a monthly wipe-down with a damp microfibre cloth and mild detergent is sufficient. Don’t use abrasive scrubbers, which can scratch the surface and degrade water resistance over time. For venetian blinds — aluminium or PVC — dust each slat with a dry microfibre cloth weekly, and do a full damp-wipe clean monthly. Pay particular attention to the tilt mechanism housing, where dust and soap residue accumulate.
When to Replace
Signs that a bathroom blind needs replacing rather than cleaning: persistent mould that returns within weeks of treatment (the material is compromised), visible warping or brittleness in PVC, slat bending in venetians that won’t straighten, or a mechanism that no longer holds position. On average, a well-chosen, properly maintained bathroom blind in the Melbourne climate should give you a decade of reliable service before replacement becomes necessary.
2026 Styling Directions: What Looks Great in Australian Bathrooms Right Now
Functionality is the foundation, but let’s talk about what’s actually looking great in Melbourne bathrooms in 2026.
Neutral tones dominate — but they’ve moved on from stark white. The current preference across Kew’s renovated heritage properties and Pakenham’s contemporary builds alike is for warm whites, soft putty tones, and greige (a grey-beige hybrid) that sits harmoniously with the terracotta and natural stone tile trends that are currently reshaping Melbourne bathroom interiors. A PVC roller blind in a warm ivory or linen tone reads as deliberately chosen rather than default.
Texture is having a moment. While smooth, matte finishes remain the go-to for most, we’re seeing strong interest in lightly textured weave effects on moisture-resistant fabrics — they give a bathroom an elevated, considered look without veering into heavy pattern territory that dates quickly.
On the venetian front, charcoal aluminium slats have emerged as a strong design choice for bathrooms with black tapware — a combination that looks genuinely sophisticated and is proving very popular in Dandenong’s newer townhouse developments. White aluminium venetians, meanwhile, remain perennially strong in heritage bathrooms where the clean line of the slat echoes heritage tile work.
Motorisation is no longer a premium novelty. Smart home integration has reached the point where motorised roller blinds controlled via a wall switch or voice assistant are a practical consideration for bathrooms — particularly for high-set windows, accessibility needs, or homeowners who simply want a seamless, cord-free finish.
Frequently Asked Questions
These are the questions our team gets asked most often by Melbourne homeowners researching bathroom blinds.
For main bathrooms and en-suites with daily shower use, a PVC roller blind is the most durable, lowest-maintenance option. It’s fully waterproof, mould-proof, and easy to clean. For powder rooms with lower moisture exposure, a moisture-treated polyester roller blind gives you more fabric and colour options while still performing well. Aluminium or PVC venetian blinds are also excellent choices if you want precise light control via adjustable slats.
Both work well provided you choose the right material. Roller blinds (PVC or moisture-treated polyester) offer easier cleaning — one wipe across a flat surface versus cleaning individual slats on a venetian. Venetian blinds (aluminium or PVC) offer superior directional light control via adjustable slats and are also fully mould-resistant. The choice often comes down to aesthetic preference and your bathroom’s light control needs.
Standard fabric roller blinds absolutely can develop mould in bathroom environments. PVC roller blinds, however, will not develop mould — the material provides no nutrients for mould spores and doesn’t absorb moisture. Moisture-treated polyester fabrics are mould-resistant but not mould-proof; adequate ventilation and regular cleaning keep them in good condition. The key is choosing the right material from the outset, not hoping a standard blind will cope.
We strongly advise against it. Real timber absorbs moisture, which causes swelling, warping, paint cracking, and ultimately structural failure of the slats over time. The warm aesthetic of timber venetians is understandably appealing — and the good news is that PVC “faux timber” venetians replicate the look almost indistinguishably while performing perfectly in wet environments. For bathrooms, always choose PVC over real timber venetian blinds.
Pricing varies based on size, fabric specification, mechanism type, and whether a cassette and side channels are included. As a general guide, custom-made bathroom roller blinds for a standard bathroom window start from approximately $150–$250 supply and install, with premium specifications and larger windows priced accordingly. Venetian blinds can be more affordable per window. Drowell Blinds provides free, no-obligation measure and quote appointments — contact us for a specific price for your windows.
For PVC roller blinds: fully extend the blind, wipe down with a damp microfibre cloth using a small amount of mild detergent, rinse with a clean damp cloth, and allow to fully dry before retracting. Never retract a wet PVC blind onto itself, as this can cause sticking. For treated polyester roller blinds, follow the manufacturer’s care instructions — most can be spot-cleaned or sponge-washed while still in position. Avoid high-heat drying or harsh chemical cleaners on any fabric blind.
Yes. Drowell Blinds services Melbourne’s south-east extensively, including Kew, Dandenong, Dandenong South, Pakenham, and surrounding suburbs. We carry stock of our most popular specifications and offer a free in-home measure and quote service. Call us on 1300 883 202 or contact us online to schedule a consultation.
Translucent roller blinds allow diffused natural light to filter through while preventing clear sight lines into the bathroom — you see shapes and light, not detail. They’re ideal for bathrooms that need good natural light without sacrificing privacy. Blockout roller blinds block virtually all light when fully closed, creating complete darkness and privacy. For most bathrooms, translucent is the preferred choice during the day; blockout suits bathrooms used in the evenings or those on ground floor with direct exposure to exterior lighting at night. Double roller systems combine both in one unit.
More effort than a roller blind, but not dramatically so. Each slat needs to be dusted individually — a venetian duster (or old sock pulled over the hand) makes quick work of it. For a thorough monthly clean, damp-wipe each slat with a mild detergent solution. The mechanism housing can accumulate soap residue in bathrooms; a periodic spray with a bathroom cleaner and wipe-down keeps things running smoothly. Aluminium and PVC slats will not rust, warp, or discolour with proper care.
About Drowell Blinds. Australian-owned and operated for over 20 years, Drowell Blinds supplies and installs custom blinds across Melbourne’s south-east — including Kew, Dandenong, and Pakenham. All products carry a 5-year warranty. We offer free in-home measure and quote appointments, with no pressure and no obligation.
Ready to Sort Your Bathroom Blinds?
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Call us: 1300 883 202 | 03 9792 5044