Call
720-729-0091
Your vision is our mission. From formal styles to contemporary looks, we fabricate custom drapes to perfection. We sew any custom style, including the common pleat styles below.
Our magic rests in our experience layering beautiful and perfectly integrated window coverings with a wide breadth of home automation systems. Working with Blinds Coutures means your clients don’t have to compromise design or technology to achieve their vision.
As the vanguard in the transition to cordless and motorized window coverings, we educate and prepare home builders and owners for automation while offering integrated shading solutions that feature the most reliable and proven technology from the world’s leading manufacturers.
Two-finger pinch-pleat drapes are commonly used to create formal but contemporary feeling without adding bulk to a drape. The pleat is constructed by joining two pleats approximately three inches from the top of the drape.
Three-finger pinch-pleat drapes are are another classic drapery style. Formal in style, with more volume, visibility and struture than the two-finger pleat. They are also known as three-point pleats and triple French pleats.
Four-finger pinch-pleat drapes are the most voluminous of all the finger pleats, mirroring the construction of two- and three-finger pleats. These are often used for larger, tall windows to create a feeling of fullness from top to bottom.
Another traditional drapery style, this is a less structured, softer version of the pinch pleat. These are constructed by joining two folds of fabric at the the bottom of the buckram.
Formal but with clean lines, the French-pleat drape is contemporary classic. Here, the pleats are joined at the top of the drapery fabric.
At their best when they are paired with architectural hardware, goblet pleats are yet another formal style. The top of each pinched pleat is stuffed to fill it out and create the goblet-like shape.
Smooth, unbroken folds are a hallmark of cartridge pleat drapes. Each fold at the top of the drape is shaped and filled with a tight roll of interlining to create rippling, perfectly rounded shapes.
True to their name, inverted pleat drapes position the fullness of the pleat on the front of the drape, where the edges of each pleat are joined together to create a solid facade.
Roseworks Fabrication Copyright © 2023 | PRIVACY POLICY