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Carpets and vinyl flooring
How Curtains Can Change the Look of Your Home
There are also be lined or unlined styles,
depending upon the amount of natural light that
is to be admitted to the room. Similarly, there
are interlined styles, with a third layer
sandwiched between the panel and the lining.
They are designed to provide protection from
cold air that is conducted from the outside to
the inside through the glass, or air seeping
through cracks in the windowsill or between the
sash and the window frame.
Tie back styles
The appearance of a window can be dramatically
altered by the colour and fabric used. It can
also be altered in the manner the curtains are
hung. One popular and attractive arrangement is
the tie back. Tie back options offer decorators
tremendous choices in creating unique and very
attractive windows.
The most popular tie back positions are the high
tie, the middle tie, the low tie, the centre
tie, the crisscrossed tie and the angled double
tie.
1. The high tie is when one or two panels are
hung in the window. The tie pulls the panel back
above the centreline of the window.
2. The middle tie pulls the panel back at a
point near the middle of the curtain. It looks
best if it is not done at the exact centre, but
either slightly above or slightly below the
centre.
3. The low tie pulls the curtain back about
three-fourths of the distance from the top to
the floor.
4. The centre tie gathers one or two curtains
and pulls them together in the vertical centre
of the window, about two thirds or three fourths
of the distance from the top to the bottom.
5. The crisscrossed tie starts with two
overlapping panels hanging the full width of the
window. The outer panel is pulled back to one
side and the inner curtain is pulled back to the
opposite side.
6. The angled tie uses either one or two
curtains. The panel is pulled partially back in
the high tie position and pulled back more
closely to the window casing in the bottom tie
position. The panel is tied back twice in such a
way that it is hung in a pleasing, billowing
angle from one top corner of the window to a
point below the opposite side of the window.
How Curtains Can Change >> Part
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