Our New Honeycomb Shades: Out of Sight. Out of Mind. Sheltering at Home Week 47

honeycomb-shades
Vertical honeycomb shades block — and filter — the afternoon sun in our dining room. We like the way our dark bronze aluminum windows frame our view; we didn’t want to cover them up. Photo by Barbara Newhall

Our Honeycomb Shades Are Here. Sheltering at Home Week 47.

Our living room-dining room remodel has been done for months, and now, finally the job is complete: our new window treatments are in place.

And you can barely see them.

For decades, our living room windows were framed by — and partially covered by — lush, creamy draperies.

The draperies were pretty. But the view they obscured was even prettier.

A Minimalist Window Treatment This Time

So this time around, we went minimalist with our window treatment. Instead of draperies (which are quite costly these days — so much of the fabric comes from China), we chose honeycomb shades, also known as cellular shades.

top-down-bottom-up-cellular-shades
To block the view of our neighbors’ window we can adjust this top down bottom up honeycomb shade. Next to the large, eight-foot window at left, you can see how little space the vertical retracted shade takes up — less than seven inches. Photo by Barbara Newhall

When the new shades are retracted, you can hardly tell they are there.

And that’s the way we like it. It’s our woodsy view we want to see when we sit down to dinner. We want to see our cypress tree. And through its branches, the fog rolling in across the San Francisco Bay.

Honeycomb Shades — They Get Small

The honeycomb material is so thin that eight feet of vertical shade collapses into a discrete, seven-inch space at one end of each slider.

And so, unless the afternoon sun happens to be blasting at us through the dining room window, that’s where our new window treatments stay — out of sight.

More about our remodel at “Hey, HGTV Fans. Take a Look at Our Remodel.”  As for installing draperies, read about that at “Window Treatment Stick Shock.”

horizontal-cellular-shade
I went out onto the street after dark the other day to see whether it’s possible to see into our living room from the street at night. It is. Now that our new can lights give us enough light to read in the living room in the evening, I’ll probably be pulling these horizontal cellular shades down from time to time so I can read in private. Photo by Barbara Newhall
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  1. Your project came out so beautiful! What color are your honeycomb shades? I also have very large windows and sliding doors. My husband and I put in honeycomb shades years ago, but ours were all horizontal and difficult to use. We went with shutters.. not plantation, narrower. I’m very tired of dusting them. Thought about drapes, but seeing your shades, I’m rethinking. I like the idea of verticals. Also love your deck. Thanks for sharing ☺️

    1. Our honeycomb/cellular shades are off white. The ones on the two 8-foot sliding glass doors are vertical. They retract to one side. Amazingly, even though they cover an 8-foot wide window, they retract into a panel that is about 7 inches wide. Out of sight! Supposedly the cellulars are also good insulators, which will be nice on the few really hot days we get. Our windows are also dual pane glass and great insulators as well.

      On our other windows, which are about five feet wide and do not open, we have horizontal shades. Again they retract to a very small space, which is really good for our purposes as we want to see the view, not the shades. Also, we like the dark bronze color of our Blomberg aluminum windows — they make for a very nice frame of our view, so we don’t want them to be covered up. The dark bronze color matches the color of the limbs of our cypress tree — a cool effect, imo.

      We have narrow shutters in an upstairs bedroom. The were there when we moved in 40+ years ago, and I still like them. The advantage is that we can open the top pair of shutters and keep the bottom pair closed. That way we have privacy, but we can still see sky and trees out the top. I do not dust my shutters! They don’t look dusty!

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