miss_thenorth
Frugal Homesteader
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I looked at the blackout material, and if it ever goes on sale, it will be an easy fix to attach to my curtains. So far, I am quite impressed with the two sheets together. they have high thread count, which makes them denser, and the inside sheet is brown, where the outside one is white. I bought the curtains at Sears during the white sale, and after washing, they were perfect.patandchickens said:I've hardly ever made curtains any *other* way, actually -- and I will warn anyone else reading this and thinking about trying the same thing that you have to be PICKY about what sheets you use, because inexpensive ones, or good-quality but old ones from thrift stores, are sometimes so crooked or uneven or locally-saggy as to make it difficult to impossible to make things acceptibly even and square. This is especially true after new sheets, that appear square and true, are washed Possibly if you buy high-quality new sheets it may not be as much of a problem but I would not know as I have never paid more than $5 per sheet from Sally Ann or etc
Miss_theNorth, if you are having heat gain problems then I would heartily recommend the minor investment of some blackout material from the fabric store, to make a second layer to put behind (on window side) of your 'regular' curtains. It is AMAZING how much less heat gets thru to the room that way. It will also help keep the house warmer in winter btw. I forget exactly how much I spent to do our 10' bow window and sliding glass doors, but it was really not very much at all. The easiest way to attach it (assuming you are using slip-in drapery hooks) is to also buy the [very cheap] tape that you sew along the top of the blackout fabric, that has loops that you can hook over the drapery hooks. It is incredibly simple, you do not even need to hem or anything b/c the blackout fabric does not ravel!
Another really really handy solution, if it fits your house's situation, is to buy shadecloth from a garden center and rig a way to put it on the outside of the windows. I have a long piece that covers the bottom 1/2 of the bay window, held in place by 2 tension rods; and two big wooden frames over which it is stretched that are jammed into position on the outside of the sliding doors. Between the blackout fabric and the shadecloth you would not BELIEVE how much cooler the house is -- I myself never expected *such* a difference. Highly recommend!
Pat