Sunday, May 20, 2007

My Homemade Curtains

Curtains, curtains, curtains. Ever since moving into the new house, curtains, or lack thereof, have become a major headache of mine. None of our windows came with any kind of covering, so we had been debating how to best cover them while still preserving the beauty of this house. Almost every single house I've been to over the course of my life use venetian blinds, which I hate. Although they're cheap and easy to install, I just think they're bland.

I wanted draperies. Silk curtains. Colorful fabrics. I wanted to turn our home into one of those makeover projects on HGTV. Alas, everything on TV looks easier than it really is. Who knew curtains were so expensive? It's just fabric! After months of research, going to stores, looking at catalogs, I simply gave up on the idea of buying pre-made curtains. First they are really expensive, more than $200 if you want a decent design and choice of fabric. Second, most of them don't even fit the windows we have. But I refuse to succumb to those white blinds. No plastic strips on my wall. If I can't buy my curtains, I will make them myself. Needless to say, four months since moving, our windows are still bare.

I overestimated the amount of effort it takes to make a curtain. There's fabric selection, length and width measurement, curtain rod installation (of course I don't do that :))...etc. After we had decided on the kind of fabric we want, we found out that we had to special order them because the store didn't carry the amount of yardage that we would need. I had no idea that special ordering meant it would take forever for the fabric to arrive.

This past weekend, after eight weeks of waiting for the fabric, it finally arrived. So, with the help of my mom, I bunkered down and began making my first set of curtains. We first measured and cut the big roll of fabric I got into equal length sections. Since the width of the fabric is not wide enough for one panel, I had to join to pieces of fabric together to form a wider piece. While that sounds easy to do, just sewing straight lines, it is not. I must have sewn and de-threaded, sewn and de-threaded about 10 different times before giving up on perfection. I had to settle for my not so straight lines and sometime scrunched up fabric. I have new found respect for seamstresses.

So after a day of pinning, sewing, and ironing, I finally had one panel made. It was actually quite fun after I got the hang of things. I think things would go much faster if I wasn't such a perfectionist or if I actually had any sewing skills. Unfortunately, after I hung the one panel up, I realized that the color I chose, dark red, is way too overpowering for our small sized media room. Back to the fabric shop to order some lighter colored fabric - light gold. Red and gold, royal, I know. Luckily, I was able to save the red fabric for our family room. Otherwise it would have been heartbreaking for me to waste over 200 dollars worth of fabric.


If this software engineering gig doesn't work out, maybe I can make curtains full time. Then again, maybe not.

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