curtains syston

Smoke and Fire Curtains Ltd was founded in 2005 and manufactures fire and smoke curtains with unique control panels. The company supplies and installs fire curtains globally, with distributors in U.A.E, Norway, Ireland, Portugal, Latvia, Cyprus and New Zealand. Fire Curtains India at Acetech Exhibition in Mumbai October 2015 Review of UK Fire Safety Legislation What is a fire curtain?At Roger Davis Fine Interiors we offer our customers a service tailored to their needs. We have forty years of experience in the soft furnishings industry, which allows us to transform your dreams into reality.As members of the BBSA all of our blinds are fully compliant with current child safety legislation in accordance with BS EN 13120. Was £25 Now £15 Was £25 Now £15 Dunelm Group plc (formerly Dunelm Mill) is a United Kingdom-based home furnishings retailer with 150 stores and over 100 in-store Pausa coffee shops, throughout the United Kingdom. One of the largest homewares retailers in the United Kingdom, Dunelm's headquarters are in Watermead Business Park, Syston in Leicestershire, England.

It also has its own factory for curtains, blinds and accessories, based in Leicester. It is listed on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 250 Index. Dunelm was founded in 1979 by Bill Adderley and Jean Adderley, trading in home textiles from a market stall in Leicester.[2] The first Dunelm store opened in Churchgate Leicester in 1984[2] with the first superstore opening in Rotherham in 1991. In 1996 Will Adderley took over responsibility for the day-to-day running of the company from his father, Bill Adderley. The expansion of Dunelm continued with a new head office and warehouse being established in 1999 in Syston, Leicestershire. In 2001 the company ventured into manufacturing, acquiring Bellbird producing custom-made curtains, blinds and accessories, with the facility now being known as Dunelm's Manufacturing Centre. On reaching their 50th store (Walsall) Dunelm opened a new warehouse in Burton. Key appointments were made in 2003 with David Stead being brought in as Finance Director;

this also coinciding with Dunelm's 60th store (Ilkeston) and the roll out of EPOS. 2004 saw the company appointing Geoff Cooper as Non-Executive Chairman and Marion Sears as a Non-Executive Director. It also saw the opening of their 70th store (Trafford). Two years later Dunelm opened its 80th store (Bradford), a new distribution centre in Stoke, and launched their online shopping facility, offering 13,000 homewares products and floated on the London Stock Exchange with it now being a constituent of the FTSE 250 Index.
curtains gosforth 2007 saw the appointment of Simon Emney as Non-Executive Director followed in 2008 with their 90th store (Plymouth) and the acquisition of the worldwide rights to the 'Dorma' bed linen brand, for £5 million in July.
hotel quality blackout curtain liner

[4] In 2009 Dunelm appointed Nick Wharton as Non-Executive Director and re-launched their online shopping website. In September 2009, the company announced that Nick Wharton would be taking over from Will Adderley as Chief Executive in March 2011 with Adderley remaining at Dunelm as Executive Deputy Chairman.[6] In September 2014 Dunelm Group plc announced that Nick Wharton had resigned his position as Chief Executive and was stepping down from the Board.
ikea division curtain railWill Adderley, previously Executive Deputy Chairman, resumed the role of Chief Executive with immediate effect.
brown eyelet curtains 46x54 On 28 November 2016, the company purchased WorldStores and its subsidiary Kiddicare for £8.5 million.
swift curtains huddersfield

As of November 2015 Dunelm operated over 160 stores, spread across the UK, and a webstore. ^ a b c d e ^ a b c d e f ^ Family pocket £100m in Dunelm float The Independent, 20 October 2006 ^ Dunelm buys Dorma for £5m Retail Week, 29 July 2008 ^ Homewares retailer Dunelm re-launches website to make Internet its largest store Screenpages ^ , 16 September 2010 ^ Dunelm Board Changes Investis, 11 September 2014
blackout curtains holocaustA man was freed from prison yesterday, 24 years after he was jailed for setting fire to a pair of curtains in a church.
ikat ogee curtainsDavid Blagdon, 51, was given a discretionary life sentence in July 1978 for the arson attack, which caused £1,270 of damage. He maintained it was a cry for help at a time he was emotionally disturbed.The judge who sentenced him recommended that he serve seven years because he had previous convictions for setting fire to a rubbish bin and a derelict car.

While murderers and rapists came and went from prison after serving their own life sentences, Blagdon remained behind bars. Home Office officials refused to sanction his release because it was considered he was making "no effort to address his offending behaviour".Finally, he was freed from Wayland Prison, near Watton, Norfolk, yesterday morning after an independent psychologist and a psychiatrist persuaded the parole board that he posed no risk to society. "It feels great to be out," he grinned as he walked out of the gates to be greeted by supporters who had been campaigning to get him freed."I have been looking forward to this day for the last 24 years and there were times when I thought I would never see it."I believe my case is one of the worst ever miscarriages of justice. Now I just want to enjoy the rest of my life - but first of all I want to get a decent breakfast because I am starving. I have been locked up for so long that I just want to chill out."I feel mixed emotions.

It is wonderful to be out but I am bitter that I served so long when I had never hurt anyone. I have had 24 years taken out of my life and now I have got to rebuild it."Blagdon was 27 and living in Wantage, Oxon, when he set fire to the curtains. He told his trial at Oxford Crown Court that he was disturbed after the deaths of both his foster father and mother.On the day of his foster father's funeral in July 1978 he had stolen a bike from outside a shop in Oxford and ridden it to nearby South Hinksey, where he had hurled a rock at St Laurence's, the village church. He then entered the church and set fire to the curtains, scorching a pew in the process. He waited in the graveyard for police to arrive and gave himself up.The Rev John Davis, 66, the retired vicar at the 13th-century church, described Blagdon's treatment as "quite barbaric" and said he was delighted that he had been released."I am worried that after 24 years in prison he will find society so changed that he will find it difficult to cope.

I just hope he has the support he needs. It is monstrous that murderers have served far shorter sentences than him," said Mr Davis.He added that the pew damaged in the fire had remained in use until recently when it had been found to be riddled with woodworm. Mr Davis then ordered it to be burnt.At the trial, Recorder Christopher Young, finding he was unable to have Blagdon detained under the Mental Health Act, sentenced him to the discretionary life sentence. The judge later wrote to Merlyn Rees, then home secretary: "In a just society, Blagdon should not be in prison at all, but in a secure place where he could be offered treatment."Blagdon did not help his cause by failing to return from home leave and, in 1998, by absconding from the Leyhill open prison in Gloucestershire and getting himself a flat and builder's job in Doncaster in an attempt to prove to the prison authorities that he could look after himself.After turning himself in seven weeks later, he was sent to a closed prison, despite 2,000 people from Oxfordshire signing a petition demanding his release."