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Post by workingclassdog on Oct 9, 2019 15:31:44 GMT
I have a sliding glass backdoor and it needs new blinds.
We are getting ready to replace our windows and there is a slight chance to change to french doors BUT it probably won't happen, but in any case I will need new blinds for the slider.. What is the popular thing to do. NOT covering them is not an option. Due to the way the houses are built in our neighborhood there are like 8 houses that can look right into our backyard into the house.
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Post by bc2ca on Oct 9, 2019 15:39:12 GMT
I hated the vertical slat blinds that were on the sliders when we bought our house. I replaced them with curtains.
FWIW, I love the idea of French doors, but anyone I know that has replaced a slider with French doors regretted it.
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Post by busy on Oct 9, 2019 15:40:52 GMT
I hated the vertical slate blinds that were on the sliders when we bought our house. I replaced them with curtains. FWIW, I love the idea of French doors, but anyone I know that has replaced a slider with French doors regretted it. Yeah, vertical slat blinds are the devil. NOOOOO. We have a double curtain rod, with sheers and curtains. We leave the sheers closed pretty much all the time to filter light and close the curtains at night.
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schizo319
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 3,030
Jun 28, 2014 0:26:58 GMT
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Post by schizo319 on Oct 9, 2019 15:44:06 GMT
I hate vertical blinds, but that's what we have because I have yet to find anything else that works for our situation. We do have room darkening curtains over the blinds, but it's too bright without ANY covering and too dark with curtains (plus I have dogs that "need" to be able to look out and vertical blinds are the only solution we've found that allows for that without completely destroying the blinds/curtains).
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Post by crimsoncat05 on Oct 9, 2019 15:44:34 GMT
on our last house we had vertical blinds on our sliding glass door; I didn't like them, but got used to them. (Vertical blinds always reminded me of an office building for some reason, but they DON'T hold nearly as much dust as regular mini blinds do, which is important in this climate. And, the cats can't booger them up or get stuck in them like they could with regular mini blinds.)
In this house, we have french doors that go out to our screened-in patio and we do love them. During the cooler months / winter, we open both doors and it makes the living room feel almost twice as big. The french doors have mini blinds built into the windows, in between the two panes of glass. No dust! They operate with a slider mechanism so we can raise/lower and tilt the slats to control the light. They raise up from the bottom, and we usually leave them up a few inches at night so the cats and dogs can see out, lol.
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paigepea
Drama Llama
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Posts: 5,609
Location: BC, Canada
Jun 26, 2014 4:28:55 GMT
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Post by paigepea on Oct 9, 2019 15:45:58 GMT
In one house we had verticals which i hated. We replaced with horizontal blinds that were cut at certain lengths so you could pull one side up to exit.
Our current house has 3 sliders. 2 have no coverings. No one can see in. One slider has California shutters - plantation shutters - and I love them.
If our sliders were standard sizes I would have done faux wood shutters. But ours are custom sizes (thank you to who ever build our house - NOT) so we had to get wood. I’m not sure they’ll be as durable as faux wood. Ours are 8 years old.
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Post by katlady on Oct 9, 2019 16:17:19 GMT
We currently have verticals that have a texture like fabric. My neighbor has wood shutters. I may eventually replace ours with wood shutters.
As for French Doors, our first house we had those. We replaced them with a nice slider. The French Doors were kind of impractical for us. We couldn’t just leave them open because bugs would fly in. And they leaked if the rain hit them directly.
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Post by deekaye on Oct 9, 2019 16:21:03 GMT
I must be in the minority because we have two sliding glass doors and I have verticals (textured stiff fabric) on both and love them. I can pull them aside just enough to let the dog in and out and I can also open them at an angle to let light in, but keep the nosy neighbors eyes out.
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Post by **GypsyGirl** on Oct 9, 2019 16:26:13 GMT
We have an 8' patio door/slider and have drapes on it. Based on the houses I see for sale in our neighborhood, that seems to be what most people do. They stack back to one side when open. In the evening when they are closed, it looks much nicer than vertical blinds would IMO. We leave them open all day since privacy is not an issue. I hated the vertical slate blinds that were on the sliders when we bought our house. I replaced them with curtains. FWIW, I love the idea of French doors, but anyone I know that has replaced a slider with French doors regretted it. We are considering replacing our slider with either French doors/fixed panel, or a single door with fixed panels on either side. I'm interested to hear why others have regretted replacing a slider with French doors. I agree with paigepea that dealing with custom size doors is a pain!
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Post by workingclassdog on Oct 9, 2019 16:47:27 GMT
I hated the vertical slate blinds that were on the sliders when we bought our house. I replaced them with curtains. FWIW, I love the idea of French doors, but anyone I know that has replaced a slider with French doors regretted it. WHY would they regret it?
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Post by MichyM on Oct 9, 2019 16:47:36 GMT
I have 2" pleated binds on mine, top down/bottom up. They're only closed on sunny mornings though when the light beats in. The rest of the time they're typically fully open. Wish I hadn't bothered with the top down on these since neighbors aren't an issue at this door's location.
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Post by bc2ca on Oct 9, 2019 16:48:40 GMT
We have an 8' patio door/slider and have drapes on it. Based on the houses I see for sale in our neighborhood, that seems to be what most people do. They stack back to one side when open. In the evening when they are closed, it looks much nicer than vertical blinds would IMO. We leave them open all day since privacy is not an issue. I hated the vertical slate blinds that were on the sliders when we bought our house. I replaced them with curtains. FWIW, I love the idea of French doors, but anyone I know that has replaced a slider with French doors regretted it. We are considering replacing our slider with either French doors/fixed panel, or a single door with fixed panels on either side. I'm interested to hear why others have regretted replacing a slider with French doors. I agree with paigepea that dealing with custom size doors is a pain! The biggest regret was because of limited screen door options. One friend had a retractable screen that met in the middle and was held by a magnet, but with a busy family, and constant opening/closing, it didn't last a summer. The other issue was needing clearance inside the room for the doors to be left open.
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Post by busy on Oct 9, 2019 16:49:27 GMT
I hated the vertical slate blinds that were on the sliders when we bought our house. I replaced them with curtains. FWIW, I love the idea of French doors, but anyone I know that has replaced a slider with French doors regretted it. WHY would they regret it? French doors look great, but one of the things I love about sliders is being able to leave it open, with a screen closed. I don't want bugs in the house.
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Post by workingclassdog on Oct 9, 2019 16:50:58 GMT
on our last house we had vertical blinds on our sliding glass door; I didn't like them, but got used to them. (Vertical blinds always reminded me of an office building for some reason, but they DON'T hold nearly as much dust as regular mini blinds do, which is important in this climate. And, the cats can't booger them up or get stuck in them like they could with regular mini blinds.) In this house, we have french doors that go out to our screened-in patio and we do love them. During the cooler months / winter, we open both doors and it makes the living room feel almost twice as big. The french doors have mini blinds built into the windows, in between the two panes of glass. No dust! They operate with a slider mechanism so we can raise/lower and tilt the slats to control the light. They raise up from the bottom, and we usually leave them up a few inches at night so the cats and dogs can see out, lol. I have seen those and wonder what happens if they break inside the windows....
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Post by busy on Oct 9, 2019 16:50:59 GMT
One friend had a retractable screen that met in the middle and was held by a magnet, but with a busy family, and constant opening/closing, it didn't last a summer. The other issue was needing clearance inside the room for the doors to be left open. My parents regretted replacing their slider with French doors for exactly these reasons.
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anniebeth24
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 3,781
Jun 26, 2014 14:12:17 GMT
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Post by anniebeth24 on Oct 9, 2019 16:53:16 GMT
We have a wide fabric roller shade that goes up and down with a pull chain mounted on the side.
It has to be pulled up all the way to open the door which is kind of a pain.
Ours is in place mostly bc of late afternoon sun, not a privacy issue. It adds some texture and color to the window, too.
When we put it down, we usually only go to about waist level so the cat doesn't rub on it. I vacuum it with a soft brush attachment occasionally.
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Post by blueeyedpups on Oct 9, 2019 16:54:46 GMT
We have sliding panel blinds for our slider. Something similar to these: sliding panels
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Post by **GypsyGirl** on Oct 9, 2019 16:57:58 GMT
The biggest regret was because of limited screen door options. One friend had a retractable screen that met in the middle and was held by a magnet, but with a busy family, and constant opening/closing, it didn't last a summer. The other issue was needing clearance inside the room for the doors to be left open. That has been the #1 thing stopping us from putting in French doors. It would really cause issues with our floor plan. That door is used many times a day to let the dog in/out, access the terrace where the grill and chairs are. It's the most direct access to the back yard. I think we are going to end up doing a 6' slider that has the look of a French door with a 2' fixed panel on the side that butts up to the wall. An 8' door with double pane glass and a wood frame is darn heavy! The screen door is an issue as well. We live in Texas, possibly the bug/mosquito capital of the world!
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Post by crimsoncat05 on Oct 9, 2019 17:00:04 GMT
I hated the vertical slate blinds that were on the sliders when we bought our house. I replaced them with curtains. FWIW, I love the idea of French doors, but anyone I know that has replaced a slider with French doors regretted it. WHY would they regret it? french doors DO take up more 'space' in the room when you open them- ours open INTO our living room and we did have to arrange the furniture in such a way as to accommodate being able to open the doors all the way to make the most of them. And even then, the dog bed in the corner of the room stops one of the doors from opening all the way. But if they had opened out onto the patio instead, they would have hit the patio table. So I can see how the space needed for them to function properly might be a concern, depending on how your room is set up-- if we couldn't open ours all the way so that they lay 'flat' against the wall, they'd stick out INTO the room, which would be awful. these are gorgeous! I have seen lots of high-end homes in Phoenix home design magazines that have these along an entire wall of the room- it makes the indoor/outdoor space all flow together and makes for some gorgeous views of the mountains from inside the rooms. (I do wonder what those people do about bugs, though- lol. Although if you're that rich, maybe you just hire someone to kill the bugs when they dare to get inside your house?)
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Post by **GypsyGirl** on Oct 9, 2019 17:07:50 GMT
these are gorgeous! I have seen lots of high-end homes in Phoenix home design magazines that have these along an entire wall of the room- it makes the indoor/outdoor space all flow together and makes for some gorgeous views of the mountains from inside the rooms. (I do wonder what those people do about bugs, though- lol. Although if you're that rich, maybe you just hire someone to kill the bugs when they dare to get inside your house?) We put this exact door in our master bedroom when we remodeled two years ago. They really are pretty IRL, as well as working very well. We got the low profile threshold which also improves the look & function of the door.
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Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 27, 2024 10:25:04 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Oct 9, 2019 17:14:41 GMT
We have sliding panel blinds for our slider. Something similar to these: sliding panelsOOOO i like those! We have verticals and I would like to replace but it is off our kitchen and leads to the deck and I am concerned about grease and grime from cooking inside and out. Our grill is about 7 feet away from the door.
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Post by roberta on Oct 9, 2019 17:21:58 GMT
I’ve had numerous sliders over the years and have always preferred curtains. Currently have three sliders and french doors and they all have curtains.
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Post by jlynnbarth on Oct 9, 2019 17:51:19 GMT
At our last house we had Pella sliding glass doors with the blinds inside the glass. They were wonderful. I can't imagine them ever "breaking". They also offer shades between the glass that have a softer look than the blinds. If we ever need to replace our slider I would chose that option for sure. For now, we just have curtains. We have to close them at night due to neighbors being able to see in. I'd love french doors, but there is no where for the doors to open without being in the way, plus we like to leave the slider door open with the screen closed on nice days.
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tracylynn
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 4,903
Jun 26, 2014 22:49:09 GMT
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Post by tracylynn on Oct 9, 2019 18:12:58 GMT
on our last house we had vertical blinds on our sliding glass door; I didn't like them, but got used to them. (Vertical blinds always reminded me of an office building for some reason, but they DON'T hold nearly as much dust as regular mini blinds do, which is important in this climate. And, the cats can't booger them up or get stuck in them like they could with regular mini blinds.) In this house, we have french doors that go out to our screened-in patio and we do love them. During the cooler months / winter, we open both doors and it makes the living room feel almost twice as big. The french doors have mini blinds built into the windows, in between the two panes of glass. No dust! They operate with a slider mechanism so we can raise/lower and tilt the slats to control the light. They raise up from the bottom, and we usually leave them up a few inches at night so the cats and dogs can see out, lol. I have seen those and wonder what happens if they break inside the windows.... You can replace the panel of glass with the blinds. It's actually pretty simple. But the blinds can't be fixed, it's a "light" replaced (what they call the glass piece).
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Post by crimsoncat05 on Oct 9, 2019 18:24:11 GMT
I have seen those and wonder what happens if they break inside the windows... I've wondered too, honestly! so far nothing too bad has happened to ours. The slider 'switch' thing that raises and lowers them must be some sort of magnetic connection, because one of ours kind of 'slipped' and malfunctioned for a bit- I think we might have tried to raise it too quickly- but my DH got it to work correctly again, thank goodness. I work them pretty carefully now, because I don't want them to break. (to tell the truth, actually, it took us a while to realize they actually functioned like a 'regular' mini blind does! When we first moved into the house, they were all the way in the 'down' position, and we thought the only thing you could do was just 'slant' the louvers to let light in through the window; we didn't realize the blinds would raise all the way up till we had lived in the house for a few months! )
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Post by littlemama on Oct 9, 2019 18:27:16 GMT
We have room darkening drapes.
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TheOtherMeg
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 2,541
Jun 25, 2014 20:58:14 GMT
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Post by TheOtherMeg on Oct 9, 2019 19:28:29 GMT
Blinds IN BETWEEN the two panes of glass in the door. This was a game-changer for the back door. Every other door covering got destroyed by traffic.
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Post by workingclassdog on Oct 9, 2019 19:35:13 GMT
Well after your awesome responses, French Doors are out. It's not like they would open to a small room (kitchen eating area) but it would be a pain and they would open right into the chairs (we could move the table to avoid that but it wouldn't look right).. I am beginning to think I like the sliders with the blinds inside them. Maybe get a room darkening curtain for those times while we are watching TV and don't want that glare... but I could leave them open most of the time and just raise the shades up and down. I like the French Door slider look but think I am going to price myself out.. lol..
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TheOtherMeg
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 2,541
Jun 25, 2014 20:58:14 GMT
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Post by TheOtherMeg on Oct 9, 2019 19:49:35 GMT
I hate vertical blinds, but that's what we have because I have yet to find anything else that works for our situation. We do have room darkening curtains over the blinds, but it's too bright without ANY covering and too dark with curtains (plus I have dogs that "need" to be able to look out and vertical blinds are the only solution we've found that allows for that without completely destroying the blinds/curtains). With the blinds-between-the-double-paned-glass option I have (Pella), I can raise just a bit of the lower part of the blind so dogs/small children can see out (as they insist upon doing), but adults cannot see in.
In the upstairs rooms (mostly bedrooms & bathrooms with double-hung windows), we tend to keep the lower portions closed and the upper portions open. For the males in the family, this allows them to walk out of their bathrooms and get dressed without flashing the neighbor behind us (who lives a fair piece away, but has a telescope on his upper deck).
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Post by red88 on Oct 9, 2019 20:42:46 GMT
I have these. My sliding glass door fits 3 panels. I really like them. I've had them up for 3 years now & no complaints.
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