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curtains, window coverings | window blinds | curtains | drapes |
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Unique Window Treatment Ideas
5 Window Treatment Ideas To Improve Your Home
Coming up with interesting window treatment ideas that bring out the
best in your windows as they bring in the sunshine, is a challenge
to anyone with a yen to decorate. There are tons of non-traditional
options and tips to make the most of what you have, and give your
windows that million dollar look on a mostly discount budget.
How about recycling old items? If you inherited lace tablecloths that are no longer fresh and white, you can still get a lot of mileage and an interesting antique window treatment, by using a sewing machine to turn the tablecloths into window curtain panels. You might even have some old lace curtains on hand, that need to be brightened, but the bleaches have failed you.
Accept their "age" and build on it, by staining them with tea for a
totally antique look. Simply take a bucket and use half hot water
and half boiling water, to "steep" 30 black tea bags. When the water
is dark, add your curtains and stir the mixture. Then let them sit
for 30 hours, with the occasional stir to keep the color evenly
distributed. Remove the curtains, squeeze out the liquid, and hang
them to dry. Window treatment ideas aren't always about curtains. The once popular wooden window blinds are making a comeback with people who prefer the warm, natural tones of wood to go with a wide variety of décors. Antique folding window covers can be had for a song at garage and auction sales, then refinished, and if you are artistic at all, decorated with tole paintings.
Little touches can add a lot to plain curtains. If you have a set of
long, lined drapes and would like to liven them up, place small
hooks or other mountings above where the rod is held, and top your
curtains with silk flower garlands, or just silk greenery. There's
no more fuss to cleaning these, than there is to washing a swag or
valance. Just put a little soft dish soap in a tub of water, swish
the silk garland around, rinse and hang to dry.
The original
eyebrow windows were built during Medieval times in
order to add light in otherwise dark thatched-roof cottages.
These little windows curved slightly above the roof line just as
an eyebrow curves over an eye. They were brought back into
popular usage again during the late 1800s, because Victorian
homes had dark upper stories which needed both light and
ventilation. They also added points of interest to long,
unbroken expanses of roof on the huge houses. Eyebrow windows
continue to be used in various types of architecture today,
although not necessarily in the traditional way.
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