Toile de Jouy: The Complete Guide to the Classic French Print

Everything you need to know about toile de jouy — history, modern interpretations, and how Katie Kime reinvents this 250-year-old print for today.

Toile de Jouy is one of the most enduring prints in design history. Born in an 18th-century French factory, refined through centuries of European decorating, and now reimagined by contemporary designers who see its storytelling format as a canvas for modern life. The print has outlasted every trend that tried to claim it because it does something no other pattern can: it tells a story.

At Katie Kime, toile de Jouy is the foundation of everything we make. Since 2013, we have hand-illustrated the landmarks, culture, and personality of beloved American cities into original toile designs that live on wallpaper, pajamas, home decor, and accessories. As noted by Architectural Digest and Vogue, the modern toile movement has given this centuries-old format a completely new life.

The History Of Toile de Jouy

In 1760, German-born entrepreneur Christophe-Philippe Oberkampf opened a textile factory in Jouy-en-Josas, a small town near Versailles. Using copper-plate printing on fine cotton, his workshop produced fabrics with intricate scenic illustrations that quickly became favorites of French aristocracy, including Marie Antoinette. The prints depicted pastoral scenes, mythological narratives, and idealized countryside life.

By the 19th century, toile had spread across Europe and America, becoming a staple of traditional interior design. The format survived because its storytelling quality gave rooms a depth that purely decorative patterns could not match.

Modern Toile de Jouy: How Katie Kime Reinvents The Classic

Real Cities Instead Of Imaginary Scenes

Traditional toile depicted idealized pastoral fantasies. Katie Kime toile depicts real places. Austin, Nashville, New York, Dallas, Charleston, New Orleans, and over a dozen other cities are rendered with hand-drawn landmarks, beloved local haunts, and cultural details that make each design a genuine love letter to a place.

Bold Color Palettes

Classic toile was limited to single-color printing on white. Katie Kime toile comes in three to seven colorways per city, from traditional navy and black to vibrant multi-color, blush, and citron. The expanded palette makes toile accessible to any interior style.

Beyond Fabric

Where traditional toile lived on upholstery and drapery, Katie Kime prints it across wallpaper, pajamas, phone cases, ice buckets, coasters, tea towels, lucite trays, and more. The same city design carries across every product category, letting you build a complete toile collection from walls to wardrobe to bar cart.

How To Decorate With Toile de Jouy

Start with one anchor piece and build from there. A wallpapered powder room, a set of toile pajamas, or an ice bucket on the bar cart. Mix toile with solid colors and natural textures rather than competing prints. The toile shop makes it easy to see how the print translates across every category.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does toile de jouy mean?
Toile de Jouy translates to cloth from Jouy, referring to the French town of Jouy-en-Josas where the print was first produced in 1760. It describes a printed fabric featuring detailed scenic illustrations, traditionally in a single color on a light background.
Is toile de jouy the same as toile?
Yes. Toile is the shortened, commonly used name for toile de Jouy. Both refer to the same style of scenic printed fabric characterized by detailed illustrations and narrative scenes.
What is modern toile?
Modern toile updates the traditional format with contemporary subjects. Instead of pastoral French scenes, modern toile features city landmarks, cultural references, and playful narratives. Katie Kime city toile collection is a leading example of modern toile design.
Can you use toile de jouy in a modern home?
Absolutely. Modern toile designs with updated subjects and unexpected color palettes work beautifully in contemporary spaces. The key is choosing a design with a fresh perspective rather than a reproduction of traditional pastoral scenes.
What products come in toile de jouy prints?
Toile de Jouy is available across wallpaper, pajamas, phone cases, ice buckets, coasters, tea towels, lucite trays, fabric by the yard, and more. Katie Kime offers the widest range of modern toile products in the market.
Where can I buy toile de jouy wallpaper?
Katie Kime offers toile wallpaper in both peel and stick and traditional formats across 15+ city designs. Free samples available with code SAMPLES.