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| Hi everyone-
I appreciate the help I've gotten here recently and so now I'm back for more! I need to put some blinds up in my kids' rooms to replace cheap plastic builder-grade mini-blinds. I just want room darkening roller shades that will almost disappear when all the way up. My questions are: What are the differences between the brands- Hunter Douglas, Bali, Levolor, JCP and others? Is one the Cadillac and another the Chevy? Which is which? Is the Levolor that is cut to order at places like Lowe's the same shade that Penney's has on their website? What material should I be looking for? I want something nice and durable not plasticky and cheap but I'm not sure I need to spend $200/window for kids' rooms. But the less expensive ones are significantly less- like $30 per window instead of $200. What is the difference? Thanks for your help! |
Follow-Up Postings:
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- Posted by tinker_2006 (My Page) on Tue, Sep 11, 12 at 7:18
| I ordered more expensive ones - in the $60 range, online - and ended up discarding them and switching to wood blinds - just because it worked better for my sun control & privacy. If you plan to roll them up - I'd just go with lowes, I don't think anyone but you will ever notice. I didn't notice mine were nicer unless I touched them. |
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- Posted by francoise47 (My Page) on Tue, Sep 11, 12 at 9:01
| Chestnut3 -- Great questions about the quality level of all the different brands. We bought room darkening shades at a national chain of stores called "Blinds to Go". They had several different fabric/price levels to chose from. The company was pleasant to work with. |
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| You have posed an excellent question, and I would love to hear the answer from a blinds expert. The fabric is an important component, but the mechanism is at least equally important. IMO, I would put Hunter Douglas at the top and the other three that you named, Bali, Levolor, JCP, as also having very good blinds. I would add Comfortex to the list as well, which is a subsidiary of Hunter Douglas. I recently bought black out blinds from Comfortex for my family room French doors, and they are as nice as you can get for vinyl blinds. I hated the old tension blinds from years ago, but didn't want cords on these windows. The Comfortex Envision blinds go up smoothly with a gentle pull. I paid $58 per blind. I bought them from blindsexpress.com |
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| Thanks for your replies. I'm surprised more people haven't chimed in! I will check out both Blinds To Go and Comfortex. I haven't seen either of these IRL so I will have to do a little searching to find them since I'd like to see them in person and try the mechanism. |
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- Posted by francypants (My Page) on Wed, Sep 12, 12 at 11:45
| Levolor is a joy to work with. We ordered a room full of beautiful woven wood blinds from them and because of a mistake my husband made (dumb, dumb) cutting the wrong cord while taking them out of the box, one was ruined. They fixed it for no cost and even paid for the shipping. They have a lifetime warranty. |
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| I've had really good luck with selectblinds.com. Great customer service and prices, plus they will mail you all the samples you want. |
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