|
Home / Home / Home Improvement / Interior Design
Making Roman Blinds For Your Bedroom
By:Lee Dobbins
Roman blinds can add a nice look to any bedroom and you can give them a custom touch by making them in fabric to match your bedding or other décor in the room. These blinds are basically a panel of fabric with laths encased in channels and cording to draw up the lathes so it simply takes a bit of sewing know how to make them.
When selecting material for your blinds, go with something that is a medium weight and match the colors to those in your bedroom.
Here’s what you need:
Medium weight fabric
Curtain lining fabric
1/2" wood laths
2 X 1 wood batton to fit across the window
Plastic rings
Angle brackets
Screw eyes
Nylon cord
Tools such as a square, ruler, pencil, staple gun, cleat and screws
First, measure the window height and width from inside the casing. Cut the roman blinds material 2 ½" wider and 4" longer than that measurement. Cut the curtain lining fabric the same width as the blinds fabric and 2" longer.
Now you need to decide how many pleats or the size of the pleats. Typically, a roman blind has 6” pleats so you’ll want to divide the length of your fabric – 4" by 12 since 6" pleats would have the channels spaced 12" apart. So, if you are making roman blinds for a window that is 48", you should have cut the fabric to 52" (since you added 4" to the measurement). Then you have to divide the original 48” by 12 (the size of each channel) for a total of 4. So you will have 4 pleats in your blinds.
Mark the lining 1 ¼” up from the bottom edge with a hem line and 2” down from the top edge. To mark your channels for the roman blinds, make 2 lines spaced 2 ½” apart starting 6” above the hem line. After you make the first set of line, measure up another 12” and make another set, again spaced 2 ½” apart. Form the channels by bringing the 2 lines together, pinning them and then sewing them to form the channel for the lath.
To assemble the roman blind, put the blind fabric and lining with right sides facing each other and lower edges matching. Stitch the lower edges together. Turn right side out and sew across the blind at the hem line. Pin the lining and roman blind fabric together along the channels and stitch them together. Baste and stitch the sides together, making sure not to stitch up the channels.
To make the pleats in the roman blinds, slip the laths into the channels and slip stitch the openings. Sew the plastic rings on the lining 4" in from the ends of the laths on each side. Cut the 2 pieces of nylon cord twice the length of the blind plus the width. Tie a cord onto each of the bottom rings and thread up through the rest of the rings to the top of the roman blinds and let hang loose.
Now you can hang your masterpieces! Attach the top part to the batton (you can use a staple gun). Now put the angle brackets at the top of the window and attach the batton to the brackets.
Attach a screw eye to the batton on each side above the rows of plastic rings. Thread the loose cord through the screw eyes and over to the right side of the window. Slip a lath into the very bottom of the blind to finish it off.
Viola! Now you have custom Roman blinds for your bedroom!
Digg
del.icio.us
Blink
Stumble
Spurl
Reddit
Netscape
Furl
Article keywords: roman blinds, blinds, shades, bedroom design, bedroom decor, interior design, interior decorating
Article Source: http://www.articles2k.com
Lee Dobbins writes for several decorating sites including Bedroom Designs And Decorating .com where you can learn more about making your own blinds.
|
|
| Top Interior Design Articles |
- 1). 7 Steps for Easy Elegance: Visually Enhance Any Room with Panel Molding By : Patricia Tomaskovic
Panel molding dates back to the Georgian period of the 1700’s. Georgian architecture is characterized by a sense of proportion and balance. Symmetry and adherence to the classical rules were valued as regular and desirable. Today, panel molding is used to break up large surfaces, which adds a formal feeling to most designs. It is also utilized as a border separating colors or textures.
|
- 2). Heart of the Home - Faux Finishes For Kitchen Cabinetry By : Jay Dorman
Faux finished cabinets are finding a welcome home in today's kitchens. From the most timeworn distressed looks to high-end lacquered finishes, a decorative painter can add just the right touch from his artist's pallet to create the exact design and style most appropriate for your dream kitchen.
As we all know so very well, the kitchen is the heart of the home.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 6). French Country Kitchen Design By : jmahoney
A kitchen can be more than just about its role in function, organization and efficiency. Kitchens need a personality and a look and feel that can liven up the senses in addition to being a functional place for the preparation of food. The French Country Kitchen design is one of many classic kitchen design themes that you could consider. It can provide your kitchen with a traditional look that has its roots in the hillsides of rural France.
|
- 7). Futons beds By : Roger King
The word futon comes from the English spelling for a Japanese-style bed known as a "shikibuton," or floor mat. The classic Futon sits straight on the floor though there are now many designs of the bi-fold that have legs
The first futon introduced into American culture was constructed of a simple cotton mattress that could be placed directly on the floor and easily folded to save space.
|
- 8). Tips For Bathroom Design By : John Francis
You might be building a home and designing an entirely new bathroom. Maybe you're remodeling and adding a new bathroom or changing an existing bathroom. In any case, you have a certain amount of room to work with. Here are some ideas.
First, list the items you absolutely need in your bathroom. This list includes, of course, the toilet and the sink.
|
- 9). Modern Furniture 101 By : Megan Roberts
As the name suggests, ‘Modern Furniture’ is furniture of our times that is comfortable, affordable, and stylish to match modern tastes and perspectives. Technically speaking, the phrase Modern Furniture refers to furniture from the latter half of the 20th century and on into contemporary styles of today. A microscopic view of this kind of furniture reveals that designers more often than not use the phrase for furnishings manufactured in the 50s and 60s in post world war II America, and to a lesser extent in Europe.
|
- 10). Choosing A Window Covering By : T Nacc
There are many ways that you can decorate your windows. You have the choice of horizontal blinds, vertical blinds, shutters, or even roller shades, and that is just to name a few. Before you head down the road of confusion you should begin by asking yourself a few questions.
What kind of space are you working with?
Do not only focus on the window space but take a look at the whole room.
|
| New Interior Design Articles |
|
|
|
|
|
|
- 4). 7 Steps for Easy Elegance: Visually Enhance Any Room with Panel Molding By : Patricia Tomaskovic
Panel molding dates back to the Georgian period of the 1700’s. Georgian architecture is characterized by a sense of proportion and balance. Symmetry and adherence to the classical rules were valued as regular and desirable. Today, panel molding is used to break up large surfaces, which adds a formal feeling to most designs. It is also utilized as a border separating colors or textures.
|
- 5). Saving Money with Kitchen Cabinet Refacing By : jmahoney
Want to remodel your kitchen but think I would be to costly? Then consider kitchen cabinet refacing.
The cost of kitchen cabinet refacing is considerably less than the cost of completely gutting your kitchen and in a much shorter time period.
Kitchen cabinet refacing can be a terrific option to consider if you want a whole new look to your kitchen without breaking your budget.
|
- 6). Tips For Bathroom Design By : John Francis
You might be building a home and designing an entirely new bathroom. Maybe you're remodeling and adding a new bathroom or changing an existing bathroom. In any case, you have a certain amount of room to work with. Here are some ideas.
First, list the items you absolutely need in your bathroom. This list includes, of course, the toilet and the sink.
|
- 7). The Bedroom Refuge By : Parvati Markus
Is your bedroom a haven — a sanctuary where you can rest and rejuvenate? If not, here are some suggestions for making your bedroom into the room that provides peace of mind along with bodily comfort.
Your bedroom reflects who you are. So the first question is, how do you see yourself? Imagine yourself in different settings. Does traditional furniture.
|
- 8). Take Your Kitchen to the Country By : Parvati Markus
Tired of the ultra-modern black and white and chrome of your kitchen? Have you gone beyond the desire for sleek minimalism and long for the comfort of a warm and cozy country kitchen? Many of us spend a lot of time in our kitchens, so comfort is right up there with convenience. Here are some ways to create that feeling of warmth in your kitchen.
Let’s start from the bottom up.
|
- 9). Let There Be Light in Your Bedroom! By : Parvati Markus
Winter Solstice is the shortest day of the year, and then the light slowly starts returning to the northern hemisphere. But that still means we have many months of the year when our bedrooms get very little or no light in the mornings, when we get up, and are dark long before we go to sleep. If you’re someone who gets blue without enough light in your life, try brightening up your bedroom by making it feel like summer!
Think summer.
|
- 10). What to do With a Large Kitchen By : Parvati Markus
Everyone loves a big kitchen. There’s lots of room for more than one cook, and enough space for informal dining. However, a large kitchen can sometimes feel cold and uninviting. By following certain guidelines, you can have a warm and cozy kitchen no matter the size.
First, consider the scale of your furniture when decorating a large kitchen. You’ll want a substantial table with comfortable seating rather than a small café table.
|
|
|