on โ19-09-2014 04:44 PM
After several hours during the week clearing and cleaning up a messy garden my day started like this
Solved! Go to Solution.
on โ20-12-2014 01:06 PM
@aps1080 wrote:lloyd
Why beat around the bush. I call a spade a spade.
But, being a bloke, that's not surprising
Ha ha, I've been known to call a spade a shovel.
I'm looking for a piccie, Freddie. Will be back with a frill-less idea.
Soon I hope, as this search is impingeing on my nana nap.
DEB
on โ20-12-2014 01:08 PM
i like the curtain,, the uneven hemline looks good. It would be worth leaving it there until you come across something else that may take your eye in the future.
It looks better than the bare window. If you don't have any need for a blind type covering (to prevent people looking in) then something lighter will do the job.
on โ20-12-2014 01:09 PM
โ20-12-2014 01:14 PM - edited โ20-12-2014 01:16 PM
Yes, that Woolies car park lurker. They spent $6.5m renovating Woolies, so that may bring extra people in too. The carpark is the same size, awkward layout.
FREDDIE- we had a new slim line venetian in our last house (kitchen). I used to flip the bits of the end of the rail, take it out to the lawn brush a soapy mixture on it, hang it on the clothesline with a couple of pieces of string and hose it down to clean it.
Didn't have to do it very often. It was a much bigger window than your bathroom but still easy enough to handle.
You can wash the smaller ones in a bath also . but no bath for you anymore.
In your bathroom as long as it didn't get mould on it, it wouldn't need a real clean very often. One of those shaped dusters might do for dusting the blades.
I am like you...about net curtains whip them down ,wash, put them back, don't take long to dry.
on โ20-12-2014 01:23 PM
Read back.. freddie leaning towards nothing on window to get more light.
on โ20-12-2014 01:26 PM
I'm a non-curtain person, and a minimilist. But found these ideas.
on โ20-12-2014 01:34 PM
@lloydslights wrote:
@aps1080 wrote:lloyd
Why beat around the bush. I call a spade a spade.
But, being a bloke, that's not surprising
Ha ha, I've been known to call a spade a shovel.
I'm looking for a piccie, Freddie. Will be back with a frill-less idea.
Soon I hope, as this search is impingeing on my nana nap.
DEB
Go have your nap DEB Mr F is cutained out, he is taller then me so he gets to put them up and take them down when I change my mind. I have had the warning ""sigh"" and when that happens I know to call it quites ![]()
on โ20-12-2014 01:37 PM
@am*3 wrote:Yes, that Woolies car park lurker. They spent $6.5m renovating Woolies, so that may bring extra people in too. The carpark is the same size, awkward layout.
FREDDIE- we had a new slim line venetian in our last house (kitchen). I used to flip the bits of the end of the rail, take it out to the lawn brush a soapy mixture on it, hang it on the clothesline with a couple of pieces of string and hose it down to clean it.
Didn't have to do it very often. It was a much bigger window than your bathroom but still easy enough to handle.
You can wash the smaller ones in a bath also . but no bath for you anymore.
In your bathroom as long as it didn't get mould on it, it wouldn't need a real clean very often. One of those shaped dusters might do for dusting the blades.
I am like you...about net curtains whip them down ,wash, put them back, don't take long to dry.
I always hang my lace curtains as they come out of the machine, they dry hanging up at the window.
on โ20-12-2014 01:39 PM
Polks, this window is a wide short window it's 154cm wide and only a 74cm drop.
โ20-12-2014 01:46 PM - edited โ20-12-2014 01:47 PM
Got me googling now. How about a Roman Blind? The fabric could have the same blue colour in it as your other accents?
Not sure how the fabric would go in a steamy room, they may have fabric suitable for bathrooms.