Fabrics for Lace and Nets Curtains |
Another
returning vogue is lace, especially with a renewal of home fashion interest in Victorian
styles. But the newer lace curtains have more delicate designs than the older
styles. Although lace is available in a great variety of patterns, familiar
laces for draperies include "antique lace," which is hand-made bobbin
lace of heavy thread with large, often irregular, square-knotted net on which
designs are darned. It is the imitation antique lace, which is the fabric sold
for draperies. Battenburg lace, a coarser form of Renaissance lace, made by
hand or machine, of linen, braid or tape and linen thread brought together to
form various designs, is machine-made for draperies. Brussels lace is now being
made by machine in delicate patterns. But the more contemporary lace fabrics
have sheer ground areas, clearer designs, and free placement of design motifs.
Fish
net, cotton or linen twine knotted together with big open loops, is often
recommended by decorators for seashore or country houses, for covering big open
window spaces, or as a wall drapery, where it can provide a pleasing pattern of
white threads against a vivid background. To provide privacy with fish net it
is necessary to have overlapping lengths. For some reason an illusion exists
that this is an inexpensive window treatment; actually fish net, obtained from
commercial fishing supply houses at best, is relatively expensive.
Fabrics for Lace and Nets Curtains |
Ordinary
net, usually in beige colors or tan, is often sold as a dining room or living
room curtain material and is considered durable, although in actuality its
shrinkage rate is high. Breton lace, net which has designs embroidered on it
with heavy, often with colored, thread, is also sold. Tambour curtain fabrics
(embroidered on a drum-like device) and filet nets from England , Switzerland
and France
are available, and provide a filmy glass curtain through which soft sunlight
filters.
Just
announced is a method of weaving nylon on looms, and lace curtains of nylon are
said to be light in weight and easily laundered. After the water has drained
off, the curtains may be hung back on the rods to finish drying. A light
pressing is only necessary at the hems.
Gauze,
a thin, sheer-woven cotton fabric similar to cheesecloth, is made in different
weaves of silk, cotton, rayon and synthetics. Theatrical gauze, now being
produced in charming pastel plaids of green, pink and white, yellow, white and
rust, hunter green, and chartreuse and white, among other color combinations,
can be used for play rooms, dining rooms, or any room where a subtle, gay touch
is wanted.
Fabrics for Lace and Nets Curtains |
Another
nylon fabric now available is a gauze of such transparent delicacy that a
hundred yards of it weighs less than five pounds. Remarkably strong and
dirt-resistant for all its sheerness, it is described as ideal for casement
curtains, as it lets in a slightly softened light, while from the outside the
close weave reflects the light and reveals nothing.
Serim,
a lightweight, stiffened, coarse gauze, with an open weave, usually in ecru or
white, used to be preferred to net and marquisette, since it had less tendency
to shrink on washing but, as explained, this need no longer be a prime
consideration, since you can get other materials which will not shrink. The
rule still holds good, however, that for fabrics which are not shrink-proof,
the coarser the mesh, the more chance of shrinking. Some fabrics with a coarse
mesh will shrink so much at the first washing as to be practically useless.
Dotted
swiss, a sheer, crisp, cotton fabric with either embroidered or raised polka
dots on a plain weave, is effective for informal curtains, and for bedrooms,
kitchens, etc.
Glass
curtains that are more opaque include the already-mentioned handkerchief or
finer linens, cam-brics or lawns; natural silk, which is naturally creamy-white
or yellow, depending on its source, or dark tan if from a wild silkworm;
pongee, which is a thin natural tan-colored silk with a rough, knotty weave, or
shantung, which is much like pongee and was originally woven o wild silk in
China but is now often mixed with rayon and cotton. All of these silk or silk-based
materials have a natural resiliency and do not crash easily. There is also
madras, familiar in a heavier weight as men's shirting material, which is a
woven cotton fabric with a stripe, a corded or a checked effect. Nylon and
other rayon fabrics that resemble silk closely can be had too, and rayon dress
fabrics in interesting prints may make unusual-looking curtains.
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