Material
For Curtains
Getting the right layout for my living room was no easy endeavor.
Getting a new couch and then figuring out where to put it, arranging
the artwork along the walls, figuring out what types of chairs would
look tasteful, but not clutter the room too much. All of these proved
to be incredible headaches. But the worst of all was picking out
material for curtains.
I don't know what it is, but I just couldn't find the right material
for curtains. I had these beautiful cast iron curtain rods, and it had
been my plan to just head down to the store and get going. But I was
just overwhelmed by the sheer variety of fabrics. A million different
colors and textures, not to mention the varied and outlandish patterns
displayed. They all swarmed at me, and soon my quest to find material
for curtains had gone from routine to hopeless. My living room would
go, for the moment, without window coverings.
Then my best girlfriend Betty came over for mid afternoon drinks, and
we had a chance to talk it out. She suggested that I didn't need to
just settle on one material for curtains. I was intrigued, and asked
her what she meant. She smiled and pointed to her handbag which,
rudely, I had somehow failed to notice as she walked in. I looked at
it, and was positively dazzled. It was sewn out of dozen of pieces of
fabric in all sorts of different colors, in a brilliant, but ragbag
configuration. She said she had faced a similar problem to my own,
being unable to find the perfect material to make her new handbag from.
So she had taken scraps of all of her favorite fabrics from other
projects, and made it from that. If I wanted to take that approach, I
certainly had enough material for curtains lying around as we spoke.
She was right. That afternoon, we gathered and arranged all of the
material for curtains until we had it lain out neatly together. Sewing
it was another matter, however. To make perfect, neat rectangles out of
hundreds of scraps is next to impossible. So we went out and bought
some neutral material for curtains from the clothing store to use as a
backing, which would show to the street. Then we sewed the scraps on to
it. The whole thing took about six hours, but when we were done, I had
beautiful, quirky curtains.
|
|