Window in between rooms
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Fab and Pretty on Feb 26, 2015@schwarzy I take it your goal is to keep the flow of light. You could take the exterior window system out and put in a once piece glass panel, with a blind on one side. I've seen quite a bit in homes with a den/computer/multi-function room. If you want to keep the exterior set of windows in place, sheer treatment (curtains or flat sliding panels) on both the family room and extension side. That would give the illusion of the other side of the window being outside.Helpful Reply
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Christine Spencer on Feb 26, 2015Perfect for barn doors! Close off the existing door to the left with drywall, open up the window to make a large entryway and hang barn doors. Maybe hang a barn door with frosted glass panels to keep both light and privacy.Helpful Reply
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Schwarzy on Feb 26, 2015Yes, that window is the only source of outside light to the dark basement family room. But I will also need to provide privacy for a bedroom on the opposite side of the window for two of our daughters. I wish I'd taken a better picture of the scenario.Helpful Reply
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Schwarzy on Feb 26, 2015I really want to remove the window and close in the wall. But if I do that, I'm going to have to "create" light within the family room artificially. I was thinking about frosting the windows even and then giving the girls the window as some kind translucent dry erase board or something. But then that won't look appealing on the side of the family room. Unless I just hang sheers over the window in the family room. I think I might be forced to do something like that.Helpful Reply
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Suzanne McEllen on Feb 26, 2015@@Schwarzy If you don't want the hassle of demolition right away, frost the glass of the windows. You can by it in spray cans. How much privacy and or light you keep is up to you, by how heavy you frost them. Use a stencil if you want a pattern in it. Or, if you don't want to see the window frames at all, you could stretch some fabric around a 2x4 frame that fits the dimensions of the full window opening. It would then turn an awkward interior window into an art piece.Helpful Reply
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Fab and Pretty on Feb 26, 2015@schwarzy seeing how the room is a bedroom, you need the window as a sound barrier. You could still do the sheer on your family room side and something more solid on the bedroom side. Barn doors aren't great for rooms with limited space as they take up potential furniture placement.Helpful Reply
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Schwarzy on Feb 26, 2015Yeah, I guess I'm going to have to do a sheer and possibly frosted glass combination for now. We just bought the house and soaked all of our money in to the down payment. Cheap decorating options are all I can consider right now. Just hate that the girls are only going to have one wall to really put furniture up against.Helpful Reply
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Becky Wood on Feb 26, 2015Read this: http://thriftydecorchick.blogspot.com/2013/01/a-private-window.html She used clear contact paper...you could "paint it" with markers or something and it make it look like stained glass. I saw a show the other day where they were turning a grain silo into a barn...they took old windows, covered each panel with a different color film and hung them up with lights behind them to make it look like they had windows. You could try lights in the window to simulate daylight if you have to cover them up...Helpful Reply
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Becky Wood on Feb 26, 2015Bubble wrap http://www.builditsolar.com/Projects/Conservation/bubblewrap.htmHelpful Reply
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Marion Nesbitt on Feb 27, 2015For just now, I would add a drapery panel that can be closed at night.Helpful Reply
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Cynthia H on Jun 28, 2015When we added to the front of the house, we left one window in place to increase light in the room that had originally been the front of the house, between the rooms. I have a matching drape on that window and linen type roman shade, matching the other outside window, so it seems like an outside window. It's great, because it lets in light we wouldn't have otherwise. Our window isn't as large as yours width wise, but is quite tall, and we have a daybed under it. I had thought of blocking the lower part of the window with bookshelves so that we had light from the upper part (like a transom), but, it isn't really a privacy issue for us like it is for your girls, so we keep it like it is. Most visitors don't realize it isn't an outside window, unless we point it out. When I change curtains, I buy two sets to keep the look. My husband had thought of removing the window and turning it into a built in bookcase/shelf unit, which might work for you. Shelving can be made from so many things, including recycled wood, that the cost would be nominal. Just a thought. His original plan was to keep the original window dimensions, framing and molding and just make shelves for both sides. Had you thought about drop cloth curtains or sheet curtains on one side?Helpful Reply
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Karen Williams on Aug 11, 2016Replace the window with glass block. We did this to prevent our kitchen losing light when we created an new entry. This will also improve security.Helpful Reply
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Sue Ryan on Sep 01, 2016is the other room a bedroom?Helpful Reply
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Schwarzy on Sep 01, 2016It was initially. Now it's my office. I've already spray painted the windows with frost and will be adding a tapestry in the near future.Helpful Reply
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