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Thermaliner White Blackout Energy Saving Curtain Liners, 80 in. Set your store to see localavailability Truck & Tool Rental The Home Depot Logo DIY Projects & Ideas Flooring & Area Rugs Lighting & Ceiling Fans Nutmeg Thermal Tweed Back Tab Curtain Thermal Tweed is a subtle tweed texture in woven room darkening fabric. Easy to install back tab panels. Choose either decorative or traditional rods. Back tabs measure 3 in. Works in any room of the house for a casual look Package contains 1 panel Use and Care Manual You will need Adobe® Acrobat® Reader to view PDF documents. a free copy from the Adobe Web site. You (or someone you know) can pay & pick up online orders at a Kmart store - and even use an international credit card. U.S. shipping & delivery Get your order shipped or delivered to any address in the United States - including hotels. Via Sears, we ship to over 100 countries, so you can have your order shipped back home.

Kmart International Online Shopping If you are planning to visit the United States, or have friends and family here, shop at Kmart to get everything you want - including gifts for yourself or others. Shopping online in the USA at Kmart couldn't be easier. Once you place an order, you (or someone you know) can pick it up at a Kmart store, have it shipped or delivered to a U.S. address, and even have it shipped to over 100 countries - whatever is most convenient for you. From the mailbox, this reader has a question about choosing a window treatment: Choosing drapes, is it better to pick a fabric color that matches the color of the walls, or should the drapes contrast with the walls so the window will stand out? And of course, as in so many decorating decisions, the answer is… it depends! How many windows do you have to dress, and what size and shape are they? This will determine the overall visual impact of the window treatment just as much as the fabric you use.

Full-length drapes with a swagged valance over top will have a much greater “weight” in your color scheme than a simple cafe curtain, obviously. So – will you use side panels, a simple valance, a panel curtain inset within the window frame (a nice tailored look we’re seeing more of these days), or layers of lush drapery, or simple full-drop curtains?
shower curtains extra long hookless What kind of mood do you want to create in your room?
detachable blackout curtainsCosy country chic or crisp and modern;
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Choice of fabric and color will depend on the overall theme. A rich burgundy brocade side-swagged drape over an antique lace privacy panel will read like a Victorian parlor, even if you choose to contrast the window treatment with a neutral creme color on the walls – but a whole different mood is evoked in the same room if you swap out the opulence for a simple tab drape in natural woven hemp fabric.
microsuede curtains walmart So you see – “it depends”!
pjb curtains One important clue is in your question, actually — if drapery or other window treatments are in a color that contrasts with the wall color, it will make the window (and the drapery) stand out as a feature of the room.
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As a general rule, contrasting color blocks will draw attention to the place where the two colors meet. If you’ve got a drop-dead view out that window, or a large room that needs a focal point and a more intimate feel, that may be the best choice. One smooth sweep of a single color, on the other hand, will tend to unify a space. If you’ve got several small windows that break up a wall, particularly in a fairly small room that can tend to feel cluttered, matching the drapes to the wall color might be the better choice. Matching colors would certainly be my first choice for rooms where you have some amazing art or furnishings that should be allowed to be the center of attention. But that doesn’t mean you need to go all matchy-poo like a department store showroom! If your wall color and the drapery color are not exactly the same color, but are kept in the same tonal range — dark, medium, light? — it can serve the same unifying purpose without looking too precisely matched.

Try a subtle pattern on a background close to your wall paint color, for example. Another way to go is with the same color for both drapes and walls, but play up a textured drapery (coarse-woven linen, tone-on-tone brocade, etc.) against the smooth wall surface. The difference in the way the light hits these different surfaces can give a window treatment plenty of visual interest, without “cutting up” the space. Look at the effect of different window treatments against different wall colors, to get a feel for what suits your style and how this matching/contrasting color rule works. For myself, I find it particularly useful to browse the window treatment sections of online shops, and the catalogues of drapery suppliers. Photographs can let you view a color combination in isolation — so much less distracting than trying to judge these things in a crowded store, with a host of other drapery fabrics competing for attention! Hope this helps you make your decorating decision, Chris.