roc lon blackout drapery liner sale

Thousands of designer fabrics and $4.99 ships any size order! Friendly customer service available weekdays 9-5. Call Us: 1-866-790-4289 | Fabric by the Yard 1 or more yards 3 or more yards 6 or more yards 9 or more yards 12 or more yards 15 or more yards 18 or more yards 25 or more yards 50 or more yards 1 to 3 yards 3 to 6 yards High Quality Drapery Lining - 30% Cotton 70% Polyester - $2.69 per yard Sort by Yardage: Low to High Sort by Yardage: High to Low Sort by Alphabetical: A to Z Sort by Alphabetical: Z to A Sort by Price: Low to High Sort by Price: High to Low Drapery Lining - White Linit by Hanes - Poly/Cotton Blend $2.69 per yard Item #: LinitWIn Stock: 419 Drapery Lining - Ivory Linit by Hanes - Poly/Cotton Blend $2.69 per yard Item #: LinitIn Stock: 479 1.3 Yards Ivory Polyester Cotton Drapery Lining Fabric Item #: 1640RM 104.2In Stock: 1 $6.98 for entire remnant

7/8 Yard Robert Allen Downey Poly/Cot Drapery Lining Fabric in Parchment Item #: 2016RM 106.3In Stock: 1 $3.98 for entire remnant 1.25 Yards Drapery Lining - White Linit by Hanes - Poly/Cotton Blend Item #: 4164rm 107.5In Stock: 1 $3.36 for entire remnant 2.8 Yards Robert Allen Am Crest Poly Cotton Drapery Lining Fabric in Ivory Item #: 3680RM 106.4In Stock: 1 $8.98 for entire remnant 1.25 Yards Drapery Lining - White Linit by Hanes - Poly/Cotton Blend Item #: 7660rm 107.7In Stock: 1 3.8 yards Robert Allen Roc Lon BO 54 Drapery Lining Fabric in White Item #: 536rm 108.1In Stock: 1 $15.98 for entire remnant 1.3 Yards Poly/Cotton Drapery Lining Fabric in White Item #: 2278RM 108.3In Stock: 1 2.6 Yards Drapery Lining Fabric in Ivory Item #: 2228RM 108.3In Stock: 1 $6.98 for entire remnant I am renting a house that has beautiful wooden venetian blinds - that I can not remove or replace - but they are not very effective at blocking the ambient night light that is abundant on my street.

Trim them to the width of your windows. Lay them out flat and paint one or both sides black with spray paint. Stick them up behind the Venetian blinds. If you only painted one side then you can face the white side out if you are concerned about the external appearance.
zepel curtains During the day you can lift them up and clip them in place with those plastic clips that are used to keep chip bags closed.
studio focus grommet top drapery panelOr if the windows are double-hung you can accordion them up and sit them on the top of the bottom sash. sheet of cardboard (or similar) cut to fit inside I am a graveyard shift worker. I found the best solution is a cheap sleep mask you can get at Walgreens. Total blackout for you leaves light when you want it. Not being sarcastic, just this is what I found over years trying to sleep during the day.

Get a set of second hand curtains from the local second hand shop. We just did this to our master bedroom. Now we own the house but didn't want to pay a lot of money for curtains and my wife found some really nice second hand roman blinds for $7.50 each. We put them underneath our regular curtains and the room stays warmer at night and significantly darker. You could the same type of thing. I'm pretty sure you've already considered this, but just in case you haven't... It may be an obvious option, but the direction your blinds face is pretty important... To block street- and auto lights, you'll want to make sure inside edges turn down, if you're any higher than the first floor. I have migrane headaches and have to have a completely dark room to sleep. I bought solid pink insulation and cut it to fit my windows. painted the side one side white and then still hung blackout curtains. you can not see your hand in front of your face in the middle of the day, but you can sleep.

That will let light in during the day and give you better coverage at night. YOu could go lo-tech and use black sheets. Just pin them up on the wall at night. That is probably your cheapest, albeit, most horrible looking solution. Then again it's just for sleeping. If you want a cheap easy solution, you can buy fabric and safety pin it to the blinds. If you pin just the top and bottom, when the blinds are pulled up 100% then ~1/2 of the fabric would be seen underneath the blinds. So I'd suggest ~ 4 sets of pin to have the minimum extra fabric seen. I'd also suggest using khaki, it is relatively cheap and thick. *I'd also suggest pin it to back(window side) of the blinds so it is not seen as much and you can retain the beauty of the wooden blinds. Make your own ShiftShade. Watch this on how it works: go to youtube DOT com and search for ShiftShade. Then buy the fabric yourself. It's called: Roc-Lon Blackout Fabric and you can probably find it at your local fabric store (mine has a 40%off sale, AND a 25% off coupon you can find on their website: JoAnn DOT com )

Then decide how you want to put it in your window. If you want to do it like ShiftShade, buy the fiberglass rods on Amazon (remember to buy the end caps, too). Alternatively, you can use neodymium magnets and metal thumb tacks, screws, or mount an additional magnet to your window frame. This whole project will probably cost around $10 per window. My husband is a shift worker and often has to sleep during the day. I bought black rubber shelf liner , cut it to size, and used spray adhesive to attach it to the windows. You cannot tell if it is day or night when you are in there. Very inexpensive and easy to do. A proven way to do blackout without a curtain rod is to use black fabric cut to the window size. Put up Velcro dots on the window frame, placed strategically to match Velcro on the fabric. You can actually make fabric to look like Roman shades. Looks great, no screws or hardware and easy to wash. Remember to use matching Velcro dots to achieve the look of Roman shades.