Any philosophy on how to come up near pane treatments prompt and cheap for my investigational house that have tons of window? It is an old cottage with lots of charm. I plan on...

It is an old cottage with lots of charm. I plan on fine art it all light, and sand the wood floors light, so I want the curtains to be light too.

I have need of ideas for window treatments that are affordable, but creative. This house is covered next to lots of windows, and I don't know what I'm gonna do.
Aside from using sheets as curtains, you can also check stores like Target, Walmart, etc., & when they're on Dutch auction get the pre-made roman shades. Usually the wicker-matchstick roll-up shades aren't that expensive, but if you wait til they're on Dutch auction, you can get some excellent deals! Then you can sway your sheet panels on either side of the pane, with the shade mounted inside the window. You can also find sale on the curtain panels & use those instead of sheets. And speaking of sheets, since you are going for the cottage look, you can take a floral print sheet, determine & cut to fit an inside mount for your window. Leave enough on respectively side to either sew, glue, or iron on cartridge a seam to finish the edges. Use 3x the length of your window (if your fanlight was 3' long by 4' wide, you'd cut your sheet/material 4'2" cavernous so you would have an inch on each side to finish the edges, & 9' long.) Flip the top of the fabric over & sew all the way across to generate a pocket for the curtain rod to fit in. (This works better than using the one already in the sheet if you enjoy a lot of them to make. This path all the hems will be consistant & one and the same size. Sew your side seams so that you end up near a 4' wide by 8'8" long strip of material. Put your rod contained by the hem you made, & hang. Now, take a coordinating plaid, solid, or doesn`t matter what contrasting fabric you want, & make (2) 2" widespread strips, approx. 6' to 7' long. (You can use ribbon, too, but that starts to get expensive when you have plentifully of windows.) To make strips, cut 2 strips of your contrasting stuff 3" wide, by 6' to 7' long. Cut another 2 strips the same size from the objects you used for the curtain. Sew the two pieces together, back to back, after turn inside out & iron. You should have two strips that are reversible (You can also do that with the curtain itself, a moment ago sew your contrasting material back to final, then turn inside out & sew the bottom.) Tie or attach the strips to the curtain rod so that one half of the strip lays on the front side of the curtain, the next of kin hangs behind the curtain. When it's support up on the window, roll or fold the long curtain up to where you want it... partly way up the window, adjectives the way down, or up. Take your tie strips & tie them around the roll/folds with a bow or intertwine either at the bottom, top, or middle of the curtain. I wish I could show you a picture, (I'll try to find one & post it here) but they are thoroughly cute, very "cottagey" & extremely easy to manufacture! You can vary the length to make the curtain (more of a roman shade, really) fatter or thinner, only make it longer or shorter. It sounds like closely of work, but it isn't, & if you do it assembly-style, you can kick it out in hours! Get some friends to back! Anyway, email me if you want, I have a few other ideas. (One is to nick really cool place mats & hang them across the top of your pane, or attach them to a rod & hang as a valance or cornice. Good luck, I know it'll look beautiful!


Well, you're within luck. Since it's a cottage, you can use cotton or cotton blend prints which can be about the cheapest fabric nearby is. I hope you can sew a little bit or have a friend who can. Use stiffness rods or the simplest rods you can buy, or even branches from trees, they can look fabulous and very artsy though curtains don't slide well on them unless you sand a touch or strip the bark off, and use big rings. Get cheap cloth at Wal-Mart, or in the bargain underground store area of any fabric store, and check thrift shops too. The creative part of a set comes when you choose the right patterns and colours. Consider eyelet lace, or just lace. Instant style, and for a while goes a long way. Most lace won't unravel when it's cut, so you could conceivably just drape a little at the edges of the window for the look of it. you go to your local fabric store. buy inexpensive yard of fabric. Then you go to walmart and buy a curtain rod beside metal clips fasteners (like clothesline clips but metal). if you want a finished look, hem the edges after you cut to size. Make slightly wider to accomodate the "pleats."
Answers:    You know how people throw the sheets up in good health i have revised it since it is a cottage style Sheet's are a wonderful window treatment amd they already own a slot for the rod this is what i did for the mean time and the mean time is be like 5 years already ..lol ..UKAY i bought some cheap sheets at a discount store with flowers and plaid bright soft colors. after i went to my local harware store bought some dowels (round wood rods)usally 3-4' tall 5/8-1/2" and if i have a larger window i used a closet rod and cup hooks to hold them and this is the afforable but creative treatment. In the kitchen i divided the window and covered partly and the other half i draped the top rod so i could have some sunlight within. Oh yes i used material glue for the edges. I didn't want to sew. It be fun easy and afforable and I am into victorian look so it was chic to me .