I just completed a set of Silk Dupioni Triple Pleated Drapes for my son's apartment bedroom. He lives about 2,000 miles away from my sewing machine.
The drapes are beautiful (silk dupioni is very forgiving), but their development was a test of my patience (limited to begin with) and stick-to-it-tive-ness (greatly reduced by ADHD!)
I wanted to share the journey, but thought it would be more fun as a game. Are these fact or fiction?
1. When asked to measure "the window opening", my son (the one with a Harvard PhD), measured the length and width of the window pane.
2. If a cross-country plane flight to measure the actual window opening and four trips to buy/then return/then purchase the "correct" pleater hooks, drapery tape, rings and thread are required to make the drapes, ready-made drapes may have been a more economical option - even if Stash Fabrics are used for the drapes and the lining!
3. The architect that designed apartments and placed the air conditioner/heater directly below every window, never had to sew drapes or curtains for those windows!
4. Measurements such as "around 60 inches, give or take a few inches" are not helpful when making inside mount drapes.
5. Carpenters may say, "Measure twice, cut once," but someone making drapes says, "Measure twice, then measure again. Go have a cup of coffee while checking your sketch - again. Then check your math - again - then measure again. Go workout. Measure again. Then measure again. Add 4 inches. Then cut."
6. Pleater hooks come in an unknown number of varieties and there is no easily available guide in English to explain the uses for each.
7. For some unknown and inexplicable reason, most Fabric Stores carry only Brand X pleater hooks and only Brand Y pleater tape. Both of which are labeled with "For best results use only with [our] brand hooks and tape."
8. "Pull-the-threads" pleater tape is great fun, but does not produce even pleats.
9. Wearing a wet bathing suit while hand sewing pleats may help keep one cool, but silk dupioni water spots shaped like a bathing suit cannot be explained away as a "Designer Touch"!
10. One bobbin will be plenty - there is no need to wind a second one.
Answers:
All Fact, except for #10, which as anyone who sews is aware - no matter how many times we repeat that statement - we know that we will be one step from finishing when the bobbin runs out of thread!!!
I'll be uploading pictures to my website shortly... Before I have to start work on drapes for his Living Room!