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Create sheer elegance with this ruffled panel which has cascading layers of soft, crinkled voile to create a bouffant styled panel. Coordinating Tiers and Shower Curtain available Capture the essence of time-less style with this beautiful printed damask scroll design in alternating colors on a textured fabric which will give your window the look of elegance. Decorate your window with this grommet foamback panel which has a beautiful allover scroll. The energy-efficient panel helps block out heat in summer and helps insulate your room from the cold in the winter. Easy to hang with a decorative curtain rod This grommet foamback panel is lined so it's energy efficient and helps protect the home from heat and cold. The insulated lining will enhance your privacy, while the brushed twill color creates a textured look that will compliment any window. Machine wash cold, gentle cycle. Tumber dry low heat. Cool iron if needed This beautiful cascading panel will add sophistication to any window.

Decorate your window with the coordinating valances for a complete look. A beautiful tailored panel in an array of color, creating a rainbow design. A perfect look for any room in your home. Panels, Tie Up Shade, Scarf Machine washable This all-over printed grommet panel has an ocean theme that features blue shells, starfish, nautical designs and sailing ships. Coordinating Tiers and Fabric Shower Curtain available Machine wash, line dry. Warm iron if neccessaryhave a natural instinct for integrating styles, colors and textures to create environments that are not only visually stunning but also fulfill the functional purpose of the space. I pride myself on delivering solutions that are client driven. I listen to my clients and present appropriate window solutions based on their unique vision, needs, style and budget. Shopping for the right solution can be daunting, I will make it fun and easy! The final outcome will wow you! An experienced professional can help you get your project started on the right foot, and see you all the way to completion.

There is HUGE value in having a space DONE! Walking into a finished space not only makes you feel good, but is relaxing and rewarding! 3 Day Blinds has been in business for over 35 years and provides end-to-end service. It starts with a personal In-Home Design Consultation. We will go over your functional and aesthetic needs and come up with a solution tailored for you. I will collect all the specifics, place your custom order and follow you through to the installation process. We manufacture and ship many of our products in as little as three days! We manufacture most of our products which enables us to expedite your order as well as monitor quality. We pride ourselves in delivering exceptional customer service, and we have someone available 7 days a week to answer any questions you may have. I am proud to represent a company that is at the forefront of the newest trends in window design and delivers uncompromised products and customer service. I hope I have inspired you!

Please give me a call to set up your free In-Home Consult today, I'll be right over! Our 3 Day Blinds product line include Draperies, Curtains, Soft Roman Shades, Decorative Hardware, Wood Blinds, Faux Wood Blinds, Woven Woods Shades, Roller Shades, Solar Screen Shades, Cellular Shades, Honeycomb Shades, Horizontal Sheers, Vertical Sheers, Vertical Blinds, Mini Blinds, Pleated Shades, and Roman Shades.
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Waterloo Fishing Rods For SaleDuettes, Architella, Silhouettes, Luminettes, Vignettes, Parkland Woods, Country Woods, Everwood Blinds, Provenance Woven Wood Shades, Pirouette, Skyline Gliding Panels, Designer Roller, Designer Screen Shades & Modern Precious Metal Blinds.
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Serving Medford, Mt Laurel, Marlton Very well informed about all 3 Day Blinds products. Sharon W - Mount Laurel, NJ - August 21, 2016 She knew interior decorating and made us feel comfortable with what we picked Mary Ann M - Sicklerville, NJ - August 21, 2016 Anne is a true professional! I shared all my dreams and my budget. She never rushed me. I felt confidant in her ability and expertise. I would recommend Anne to everyone looking to upgrade. Karen H - Riverton, NJ - June 19, 2016 Family owned and operated since 1964, Colors To Go is your source for quality paint and decorating products. We feature the top brand name paints, painting supplies, In-Home Color & Design consultations, wall-covering and window treatments, with our experienced, dedicated staff, committed to helping you create the beautiful living and working spaces that you desire. Come in now to get great ideas for your spring projects & to experience the difference shopping at an independently owned store makes.

As always, we're here and ready to help! "Like" us on Facebook! Follow us on Twitter! Apps, Tools and Games on April 20, 2014 at 12:39 PM, updated After a brutal winter, spring has returned in all its glory to the Garden State, bringing with it warmer temperatures, more genial dispositions – and millions of birds. Mile for mile, New Jersey is possibly the best state in the country for birdwatching. Spring heralds the arrival of some of the most colorful and charismatic birds on the continent – neotropical migrants and passerines like warblers, vireos and flycatchers. They're traversing the Atlantic flyway, from South America to northern climes, and stopping here to rest or breed. Birds, now more concerned with mating than avoiding predators, start to become more conspicuous. They're literally more colorful in their spring plumage. They perch on branches, looking for a partner, and start singing. Here are the seven best places to find them. If you think we've left out any hidden gems or snubbed some obvious choices, let us know in the comments.

Garret Mountain, according to Pete Bacinski, of the New Jersey Audubon Society, is not just one of the best places in the state for spring birds. It's one of the best migratory stopovers in the country. It's because they get stuck in a bottleneck. How very New Jersey of them. Birds flying up the East Coast at night travel by the Watchung Mountains. As the sun starts to peek over the horizon, they take one look at urban Paterson to the north, and they think better of trying to make the trip. So they drop into the northernmost patch of green around, Garret Mountain, to rest and to eat. Birders are there waiting for them. "It's basically a funneling effect," Bacinski says. The New Jersey Audubon Society leads field trips to Garret Mountain, and if you show up there with binoculars at some morning in the next few weeks, you won't be alone. Sandy Hook is another great migrant spot because of the same sort of funneling effect you'll see at Garret Mountain, Bacinski says.

Birds coming up the east coast will get to the end of the peninsula and see a vast body of water that they don't want to try to traverse without eating and resting. So they plop down on the shores of Sandy Hook to regain strength. It's also a great place to see shorebirds, including the endangered least terns and piping plovers, which nest there, according to the Audubon Society. Old Mine Road is at the end of Interstate 80, on the border of Pennsylvania in the northwest of the state. Old Mine Road is maybe your best shot at seeing a cerulean warbler, a sky-blue bird that prefers the same tall, 100-foot trees that loggers do. Because of that, it's the fastest-declining warbler on the continent. They take up residence in the protected forests around the Delaware Water Gap. Old Mine Road is also great for birders who may have friends and family who'd rather kayak, canoe or hike, or for birders who can multitask. The diverse habitat there means diverse arrays of species to find.

In late May, Bacinski is leading a field trip there. The Great Swamp, in Morris County, almost became an airport. It's now a protected wildlife area. What better place to go look for flying two-winged creatures that sing, rather than roar? It's a great spot for migrant warblers (the palm warblers are already in town, and last year there were several prothonotary sightings). A few weeks ago, groups trekked out to see the mating dance of the American woodcock, a bird so charming you'd think it came straight out of Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies. This weekend, your bird-correspondent saw three bald eagles at the Friends Blind, and almost got a good look at a group of wood ducks, the avian manifestation of an anxiety attack (they will fly away, skreeking, at the sound of the softest footfall). Novices might want to visit the Raptor Trust, a hospital for birds where you can see, up close, birds of prey, like bald eagles, ravens and a variety of hawks. New Jersey's "bird Vahalla," as a colleague once dubbed Brigantine, is the place to go if you like shorebirds and waterfowl (Bacinski calls it one of his favorite places on Earth).

The Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge was established to protect birds, including the American black duck and the brant, according to the Audubon Society. You can see endangered least terns and piping plovers, as well as "significant congregations" of ducks and gulls. New Jersey takes great pride in its shore, and this is the place to go if you're less GTL and more GLT -- groups of least terns (sorry). Cape May County, the southernmost part of the state, is better known for its autumn migration and hawk-watches, but it's still a great spring hot spot. Bacinski says on a field trip in a recent April, he spotted 102 species. On May 10, the Cape May Bird Observatory will hold the World Series of Birding. Birders from all around the country look for as many birds as they can find in 24 hours to raise money for environmental causes. For those not quite ready for the World Series, the observatory is holding events all throughout May, with a number of bird-identifying workshops.

Much more than a football field, the Meadowlands is an oasis of nature in the middle of one of the world's most crowded urban areas. The Richard W. DeKorte State Park is a good place to start. According to the Meadowlands Nature Blog, snowy owls are still lingering by the Hackensack River. The tidal salt marshes, mudflats and wetlands boast significant populations of ducks and wading birds, like herons and egrets, according to the Audubon Society. Bergen County even has its own local Audubon Society. Eagles have made a spectacular comeback in New Jersey (at one point only a few decades ago, you could count the number of mating pairs in New Jersey with one hand that was missing three fingers). Nowhere else in the state embodies that struggle more than the eagles nesting near Overpeck Creek. Duke Farms, in Hillsborough, will be host to one of the most original birding events in the state: birding by bike. The Audubon's centers at the Scherman Hoffman Wildlife Sanctuary in Bernardsville and the Plainsboro Preserve offer a number of avian resources.