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Creating Your Comfort Zone

Window treatments can go a long way toward boosting your home’s energy efficiency, keeping you comfortable. That’s because compared to insulated walls and ceilings, windows easily allow more heat to escape from a room in winter and more heat to enter a room in summer. In fact, without energy-efficient window coverings, a home can lose up to 30% of heating and cooling energy through its windows, according to the Department of Energy.

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Duette® Honeycomb Shades

How Window Treatments Improve Energy Efficiency

Window treatments help with a home’s energy efficiency by providing insulation, controlling solar heat gain, and by using natural light to reduce the use of electric light (called daylighting), which saves energy. Here’s a look at each—and how they help create your comfort zone.

Providing Insulation—Winter/Cool Climates
In winter, or if you live in a cool climate, window treatments help insulate at the window, preventing heat from escaping and keeping a room warmer.

Open your window treatments during the day so that free solar heat from direct sunlight will warm your home.

On cloudy winter days, close your window treatments to add an insulating layer to your house that will keep warm air in.

At night, close your window treatments to add that insulating layer.

Controlling Solar Heat Gain—Summer/Warm Climates
During the day, close your window treatments to prevent the sun’s harsh rays from heating up a room, keeping it cooler (so your A/C doesn’t have to work as hard).

At night, keep your window treatments closed to keep the cool air in.

Using Daylighting
Natural light illuminating a room can make it more inviting, and may even boost your mood at the same time. You can maximize natural light with window treatments that draw it into a room, reducing the need for electric light, which reduces energy use.

blind over big window with chair and cubbies

Duette® Honeycomb Shades

Energy Efficiency A-List

The Attachments Energy Rating Council (AERC) is an independent organization, partially funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, whose mission is to provide consumers with reliable information about the energy performance of window attachments (blinds, cellular shades, roller and solar shades).

Hunter Douglas is the first company to receive an AERC certification for interior window coverings. Currently, Duette® (including the Alustra® Collection) and Applause® Honeycomb Shades, Sonnette® Cellular Roller Shades and select Designer Screen Shades are AERC certified.

And on the AERC website, you can search for AERC certified products and compare window attachment ratings in categories such as Cool and Warm Climate Ratings.

Leading Energy-Efficient Styles

When it comes to window treatments, energy efficiency and comfort go hand in hand. And while all Hunter Douglas window treatments help you live more comfortably, the following are the best options when it comes to enhancing energy efficiency.

stripped couch in front of window

Cellular Shades

Duette® Honeycomb Shades

Cellular shades are the most insulating interior shades available anywhere. While you might think your vinyl blinds are helping save energy, field studies have shown that cellular shades outperform traditional vinyl blinds in terms of energy efficiency.

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Duette® Honeycomb Shades
The original cellular shade, featuring a unique honeycomb construction that traps air in distinct pockets, for an extra layer of insulation at the window. Available for every window shape, including skylights and European-style tilt and turn windows, as well as French and sliding doors.

Duette Architella® Honeycomb Shades
This style is the most energy-efficient cellular shade available, providing even greater insulation than the original Duette. That’s because its honeycomb-within-a-honeycomb construction has more layers of fabric and insulating pockets than other fabrics in the Duette line.

blue cabinets with lady looking out window

Roller and Solar Shades

Sonnette® Cellular Roller Shades

Roller and solar shades feature clean, contemporary lines, and help reduce heat gain in a room; solar shades also filter sunlight.

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Designer Screen Shades
Designed to provide UV protection while reducing glare and heat gain in a room, Designer Screen Shades are available in a range of openness factors so you can select the view and level of light you want.

Sonnette® Cellular Roller Shades
These modern cellular shades combine the insulating construction of a cellular shade with the clean lines and simplicity of a roller shade.

city scape with couch and table

Roman Shades

Vignette® Modern Roman Shades

Roman shades provide the benefits of a cellular shade but with the luxurious look of a Roman shade.

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Vignette® Modern Roman Shades
Vignette features exquisite woven fabrics, flat or contoured folds, and doesn’t have exposed cords on the back of the shade.

Vignette Duolite®
This style combines a light-filtering or sheer front shade with a room-darkening back panel; once the front shade is completely lowered you can adjust the back panel for varying levels of light control (and privacy). The room-darkening liner provides additional energy efficiency to already energy-efficient, beautifully woven Vignette fabrics.

Solera® Soft Shades
These shades combine the soft folds of a classic Roman shade with a cellular construction. They’re available in gorgeous woven and non-woven fabrics, colors, patterns, and textures, in both light-filtering and room-darkening opacities.

side panels and drapery with couch and table

Side Panels and Drapery

Design Studio™ Side Panels & Drapery

Side panels and drapery add another layer of insulation at the window while helping to prevent light gaps.

Top Choices

Design Studio™ Side Panels and Drapery
Designed to coordinate and layer with all Hunter Douglas window treatments, Design Studio Side Panels and Drapery provide a finished look.

shutters with lady on couch and plant

Shutters

Newstyle® Hybrid Shutters

Interior shutters—whether wood or vinyl—add character to a room, while the natural insulating properties of wood and the air barrier inside vinyl shutters help create a more comfortable space.

In winter, open shutter louvers so the sun’s rays can help warm up interiors—or close them to keep cold air out. In summer, close louvers to help keep warm air and the sun’s rays out, so a room stays cooler, reducing air conditioning costs.

Top Choices

NewStyle® Hybrid Shutters
Durable and beautiful, these hybrid shutters are great for high-traffic areas and are available in a variety of colors and design styles.

Palm Beach™ Polysatin™ Shutters
Because these shutters are made to take the heat, they’re ideal for windows exposed to sunlight and moisture and are an excellent choice for damp or humid spaces. Made from a durable poly-satin compound, Palm Beach shutters won’t warp, crack, fade, chip or peel.

Heritance® Hardwood Shutters
Elegantly crafted from 100% natural basswood or poplar hardwood, Heritance shutters add richness to any room. Choose from a wide selection of paints and stains as well as custom colors.

Adding Smarts to Your Shades, Drapery, and Shutters

To capitalize on the energy efficiency you get from shades, you need to raise and lower them as necessary, depending on the time of day and time of year. But what if you’re not home, or simply busy?

That’s where automated shades (as well as automated drapery or shutters) can help.

Automated window treatments add convenience to your day to day, while making it easier to save energy. With PowerView® Automation, you can schedule your window treatments to move according to the schedules you set. That way, they’ll be in the best positions to block heat loss when it’s cold or keep out harsh rays in the summer. And if you integrate your PowerView Hub with a compatible smart-home system, you can program your window treatments to adjust in response to light- and temperature-sensor commands sent from that system.

For instance, when your home reaches a certain temperature, you can set your shades to automatically lower, blocking light from entering the room. This provides better insulation, blocks solar heat gain, and also prevents the sun from fading and deteriorating your fabrics, carpet, hardwood floors, and other wood surfaces.

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