Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone please enlighten me - why does a simple roller shade from, say, the Shade Store or Next Day Blinds or Hunter Douglas cost a minimum of $400 for a normal sized window? If you want a cassette to hide the plastic at the top you're easily at $600+ per window. That's $1200-$1800 for a normal, colonial bedroom, I'm not talking about a floor to ceiling wall of glass here. And then if you want anything fancier like roman shades or woven wood blinds, you're at $1000+ per window. How can the industry get away with that? What does everyone here do for window treatments?
Believe it or not, you can make your own roller shades! I followed instructions in a book, but you can probably find You Tube tutorials.
Anonymous wrote:
I just got a quote for a roman shade from shade store. It was $1300 without installation for one shade for a kitchen window—so it’s not the installation that’s cranking up the cost. I think I paid around $600 10 years ago for a similar sized roman shade from them. (It was probably a little smaller.) I was willing to pay that then, and it was a nice shade that I loved, but now I’m balking.
They should teach sewing in school. Home Ec was pretty much required in middle school when I was a kid. Life long skill. I made my own roman shades, and they were professional quality. Not hard, if you follow instructions and proceed with care at each step.
Anonymous wrote:Try Costco!
Anonymous wrote:I just got a quote for a roman shade from shade store. It was $1300 without installation for one shade for a kitchen window—so it’s not the installation that’s cranking up the cost. I think I paid around $600 10 years ago for a similar sized roman shade from them. (It was probably a little smaller.) I was willing to pay that then, and it was a nice shade that I loved, but now I’m balking.
Anonymous wrote:Someone please enlighten me - why does a simple roller shade from, say, the Shade Store or Next Day Blinds or Hunter Douglas cost a minimum of $400 for a normal sized window? If you want a cassette to hide the plastic at the top you're easily at $600+ per window. That's $1200-$1800 for a normal, colonial bedroom, I'm not talking about a floor to ceiling wall of glass here. And then if you want anything fancier like roman shades or woven wood blinds, you're at $1000+ per window. How can the industry get away with that? What does everyone here do for window treatments?
Anonymous wrote:If you read this thread with a skeptical eye, you start to notice the appearance of shills for Steve’s Blinds and Select Blinds.
An anonymous poster says how great they are, the next day another anonymous poster confirms this and offers additional info about their service can connect us with local installers. Neither poster has any post history.
I didn’t notice this until someone on page 3 pointed out the odd preponderance of pro-Steve’s posts. Now the scales have fallen from my eyes (gross). Micromarketing has come to DC Urban Moms & I don’t like it.
Anonymous wrote:If you read this thread with a skeptical eye, you start to notice the appearance of shills for Steve’s Blinds and Select Blinds.
An anonymous poster says how great they are, the next day another anonymous poster confirms this and offers additional info about their service can connect us with local installers. Neither poster has any post history.
I didn’t notice this until someone on page 3 pointed out the odd preponderance of pro-Steve’s posts. Now the scales have fallen from my eyes (gross). Micromarketing has come to DC Urban Moms & I don’t like it.
Anonymous wrote:I worked with a decorator who explained to me just how complex the construction of a roman blind is. There are something like 400 pieces that all have to be assembled, so it is genuinely a lot of labor. One good trick: if you want panels of some gorgeous, expensive fabric across a wide space, do juuuust enough so they look full and fluffy when hanging at the sides and then get blinds, shutters, etc. for the center windows for the actual light blocking.