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PFR or IFR Face Layer & Lining Fabrics Wool Core – Absorbs, Filters & Breaks Down Harmful VOC’s From The Air Custom Designed For Any Application Variety of Fabric Options The Acousti-Curtain is a revolutionary new product. Sound absorbing drapery primarily designed to absorb more sound than standard decorative curtains. These curtains are made with sound absorbing material and are ideally used where control of acoustic reflection off of glass and ambient light control are required. These acoustical curtains feature a core material of naturally fire resistant wool fabric that is sandwiched between a decorative fabric and a blackout liner. The wool core material has also been shown to continuously filter harmful VOC (Volatile Organic Compounds) from the air. The Acousti Curtain product will also reflect thermal energy and block light when drawn across a window or doorway. The Acousti Curtain is custom designed to fit and match your interior design specifications.

Please call for a quote. Note: The Acousti-Curtain does not block sound transmission and should not be used as a noise barrier. Product Testing & Information Sound Absorption Test NRC browse this site you are agreeing to our use of cookies. Click here to find out Dress your windows with ready-made curtains, including a selection of pencil pleat headings and the more contemporary eyelet curtains. All of our luxury curtains use the finest materials with both plain and patterned designs of varying lengths. Price Low to High Price High to Low Montgomery Rib Plain Curtains White Montgomery Rib Plain Curtains Pewter Montgomery Falun Curtains Coral Jeff Banks Fern Curtains Mink Jeff Banks Diego Curtains Silver Jeff Banks Diego Curtains Natural Jeff Banks Diego Curtains Teal Montgomery Veldriff Curtains Pewter Jeff Banks Painted Stripe Curtains Charcoal Montgomery Brae Curtains Sienna Montgomery Vogue Curtains Taupe

Montgomery Meadow Tiebacks Red Montgomery Meadow Curtains Red Jeff Banks Fern Curtains Eau De Nil Jeff Banks Ennerdale Curtains Charcoal Jeff Banks Ennerdale Curtains Cream Montgomery Kirkwall Curtains Red Word not found in the Dictionary and Encyclopedia. Please try the words separately: Some articles that match your query:
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It's Your Move (disambiguation) It's Your Move (game show) It's Your Party and I'll Crash If I Want To It's Yours to Keep It's're breaking my heart! It'That's a bit steep! It'That's the story of my life It'You're breaking my heart! It, the Living ColossusGorgeous BedBeautiful BedsBeautiful BedroomsBeautiful AntiqueAmazing BedLovely Bed1800'S IncredibleVibe BeautifulBed DreamyForwardI don't spend much time on this blog and don't know if or what this blog will become. I kinda inherited it lol. You will find me more on my main blogs which are "missingsisterstill" and Please visit those also. Free shipping on orders over USD49When we bought our Twenties house, we embarked on a programme of improvements and renovations which, I hoped, would include replacing all the rusty, draughty old metal-framed windows. However, having done the windows in the children’s bedrooms, we ran out of money, as one does. While the walls of our house have a U-value of 0.3 (the lower the better), the old windows, with a U-value of 6, allow heat to escape at a terrifying rate.

Last year’s prolonged winter nearly killed us, and with my husband threatening to leave if the house isn’t warmer this year, I have been testing a wide range of window coverings, balancing out the triple requirements of value for money, aesthetics and draught exclusion. 'BlocOut’ blind £143 These opaque blinds fit snugly within vertical “runners” attached to the window frame. At the bottom of the blind is a rubber seal and brush similar to draught-excluder brushes on front doors. Tested for energy-saving potential by the British Board of Agrément (BBA), these blinds were found to have significant energy-saving properties, reducing heat loss through single-glazed windows by 43 per cent, saving around £180 a year on heating bills in a three-bedroom single-glazed house. They’re reasonably straightforward to fit as long as you are absolutely pinpoint accurate with the measurement for the vertical runners, as they must fit the window frame exactly. I managed with only a few expletives.

They’re perfect at night as they block out light as well as draughts, but need to be opened during the day to let the winter sun in, so they are not effective during the hours of precious winter daylight. The blind material is a little “plastic-looking” and maybe the next step could be to offer a more natural finish. Aesthetics: 3/5 Cost: 4/5 Interlined Roman blind £196 Aesthetically the most pleasing solution. I chose a pale fabric so the warm interlined blind allows sunlight through when closed. It fits more snugly to a window than curtains do and, as our radiators are underneath windows, avoids the problems curtains cause by allowing heat to escape through the window without getting into the room. The centre of the blind blocks out draughts, but there are still cool eddies around the edges and bottom. Draught exclusion: 3/5 Aesthetics: 5/5 Cost: 3/5 Removable plastic made-to-measure secondary glazing £72 This was a cheap and extremely easy-to-fit option. I measured the width and length of the windows, entered the details online and the “window” arrived the next day.

It’s easy to fit, too – you just peel off the backing tape from the adhesive back edge and press to the window frames. There’s no problem with light getting in, and because it is in a bathroom over frosted glass, it does not require an additional window covering. It is not particularly pretty, and there is slight cooling at the edges. I had to remove it for decorating purposes, and when I tried to replace it the adhesive had gone, so I had to stick it back with superglue – this is not ideal, and I know when I remove it again the superglue will take all the paintwork with it. Draught exclusion: 3/5 Aesthetics: 3/5 Cost: 5/5 Interlined curtains with 'permanent’ glass secondary glazing £370 Quite an expensive option, and although theoretically I can remove the secondary units, they are pretty much permanent, as the wooden frames are screwed into the window frames. Combined with interlined curtains they are thermally very effective, but they are significantly more expensive than the others.

The wooden-framed secondary units look better than standard aluminium-framed secondary glazing but, frankly, still look a little odd attached to period frames. It is possible to buy new double-glazed windows for around the same price, but this is a good alternative if you want to retain period windows. Own carpenter and sewing. Draught exclusion: 5/5 Aesthetics: 3/5 Cost : 2/5 New ultra-low-noise double-glazed window with fitted blind £750 “If I were a rich man…”, as the song goes, I would replace all my old windows with brand-new double or even triple-glazed ones. Twelve years in a draughty house nearly 100 years old have removed any romantic notions I once had about metal-framed Crittall windows, and I don’t care what the conservationists say. We have recently replaced a pair of 12-year-old double-glazed roof lights with a U-value of 3 for a new set of ultra-efficient ones with a U-value of 1.3, and the difference is fabulous. Trouble is, until the children have been safely shepherded through university, we won’t be able to afford any more.