We didn't do the window treatments. We want to be straight about that, because we're proud of what we did do and there's no reason to dress it up. The drapery and the rest of the design work belong to other hands. What came from us was the hardware — and in a room like this one, the hardware matters more than people think.
What went up in that room
The rods and finials are from the Vesta Castilian collection, solid brass, 1 3/8" diameter. If you've spent any time around drapery hardware, you know "solid brass" and "brass-look" are two very different animals. A lot of what's sold today is steel or aluminum with a brass-colored finish baked on. It looks fine in a photo. It does not have the weight, and it does not age the same way. Castilian is the real thing — heavy in the hand, traditional in its lines, the kind of rod that belongs in a house full of original furnishings rather than fighting with them.
You can see why it works in the photo the mansion let us share. Sage-green pinch-pleated panels with a banded hem, hung over delicate lace sheers, against floral wallpaper in a twin-bed guest room. The brass rod runs straight across the top and lets the eye go right to the window — which, given the leaded glass in that house, is exactly where you want it to go. The hardware doesn't shout. It just holds everything up and looks like it was always there. That's the whole job.
Why solid brass earns its keep on heavy drapery
Here's the practical reason this isn't just a matter of taste. Lined, pleated drapery is heavy. Full-length panels with a proper lining can run several pounds per side, and a hollow rod with lightweight brackets will start to sag in the middle or pull loose at the wall over time. Solid brass holds a long span without bowing, and it takes a real bracket and a real screw into a real anchor. For a wide window — and the windows in a house like Barker are tall and wide — that rigidity is the difference between drapery that hangs clean for twenty years and drapery that develops a smile in the rod by year two.
It's also the difference you feel every time you draw the curtains. A good brass rod and a quality ring move quietly and smoothly. A cheap one announces itself.
You don't have to own a mansion
The point of telling you this isn't that we did one fancy job. It's that the same Castilian rod that went to a historic museum is the same one we'll sell you for the dining room you've been meaning to finish. We ship drapery hardware all over the country — that's a big part of what we do at InteriorDecorating.com — and the brass that's good enough for a National Register house is sitting in the same catalog as everything else.
If you're working on an older home, or a newer one you want to feel settled and traditional, solid brass is worth the difference in price. Measure your window, count your panels, be honest about how heavy your drapery is, and size the rod to the job. If that last part makes your eyes glaze over, that's what we're here for.
We've been doing this a long time, and there's not much in the way of windows, rods, brackets, and "will this hold?" that we haven't seen. If you've got a project — a single stubborn window or a whole house — give us a call or send an email through InteriorDecorating.com and we'll help you get the hardware right the first time.
Our thanks to the Barker Mansion for letting us share the room. If you're ever up that way, it's worth the tour.


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