The first paint color I chose was too light. I made a few errors when I first started. Who washes their curtains, right?! Right?! It is supposed to help keep it from cracking and possibly make it washable. You really don’t need to spend money on good paint, and I never added medium to the paint. Then I bought the cheapest flat paint I could buy. I just folded over about 10-11 inches at the top so I didn’t have to sew them. For my big window, I ended up needing a full drop cloth on each side. Those I bought were from Walmart at $20 per. There are just too many other things I need/want to do around here so my money needs to stretch (a lot). I would never justify spending $500+ on curtains. When I did, they were either not what I was looking for or really expensive. In my quest for curtains, I rarely found any that were long enough. The window takes up majority of that height. I just made some errors and it drug on much longer than it should. Not that this project was necessarily difficult. Still is because I have 2 panels remaining that need done for my dining room window. This project was the bane of my existence. I love these curtains…now that they are hanging up and not laying on my dining room floor (for weeks). Regardless, I love projects and the satisfaction of our finished product is worth the journey to get there (usually anyways). That usually gives us a more accurate idea of our investment. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve had people say, “You did what?!” We’ve learned to figure out how much time a project should take…then multiply it by 4. I love all things DIY. At my house we probably go a little heavier with these type of projects than we should. When I needed to find curtains for my living/dining room area (that didn’t cost over $100 per panel), I decided to give them a try. We travel all over the country.Have you heard of DIY curtains made from painter’s canvas drop cloths? Thanks to Pinterest, I had. It only took a couple of photos and I fell in love with the idea. We have several in house installation teams who can come to site and install the product from scratch if you so require. Once again this will all be done to your choosing. These can be company’s logos, images of products or just curtain numbers. If PVC is chosen then we can print onto the material whatever you wish with our in house digital printers. All curtains would come with fixings lets that be rollers or eyelets depending on how it will be attached. The range of PVC will go from 650gsm to 950gsm and if indoors would be fire resistant. We use a variety of materials for the curtains and this will depend on what your exact requirements are. There PVC partitions or curtains are very flexible can be moved from side to side (or up and down) depending on what you precise requirement is. They can help reduce energy bills especially if you are looking at the PVC strip curtains that allow easy access but keeps the heat in the room. Industrial curtains help to protect foreign particles from getting into areas where they are unwanted and along with that it helps in the control of the environment of your factory, warehouse or office. We make everything made to measure and would provide the full turnkey solution for you from site measurements to final instalment with our in-house team. We might need to separate parts of your factory, office, and unit or just have PVC doors on an existing building. Stuart Canvas can manufacture to your bespoke requirements industrial curtains to help partition off any park of you working facility.
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