How to pack your stuff

BJ Dodenbier • March 28, 2022

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Write about something you know. If you don’t know much about a specific topic, invite an expert to write about it. Having a variety of authors in your blog is a great way to keep visitors engaged. You know your audience better than anyone else, so keep them in mind as you write your blog posts. Write about things they care about. If you have a company Facebook page that gets lots of comments, you can look here to find topics to write about.



Write about something you know. If you don’t know much about a specific topic, invite an expert to write about it. Having a variety of authors in your blog is a great way to keep visitors engaged. You know your audience better than anyone else, so keep them in mind as you write your blog posts. Write about things they care about. If you have a company Facebook page that gets lots of comments, you can look here to find topics to write about.

By Sammie Bailey June 9, 2026
Most people approach window treatments the same way in every room — pick something that looks good and call it done. The problem with that approach is that no two rooms in your home have the same needs. The light is different. The function is different. The way you live in the space is different. A bedroom needs darkness at 7am on a Saturday. A kitchen needs something practical that survives steam and splatter. A living room needs to handle afternoon glare without making the space feel like a cave. A home office needs to eliminate screen glare without losing the view. Get the treatment wrong and you'll notice it every single day — squinting at your screen, waking up too early, or living in a room that never quite feels finished. Get it right and you stop thinking about your windows entirely, which is exactly the point.  Here's how to choose window treatments for every room in your home — starting with what that room actually needs.
By Sammie Bailey June 2, 2026
Most homeowners think about their windows as a view. A way to let in light, frame the mountains, or brighten a room. What they rarely think about is what's coming in with that light — and what it's quietly doing to their home, their furniture, and their energy bill. If you've ever sat near a south-facing window in July and felt the heat radiating off the glass, you already understand the problem. You just might not know how significant it is — or how simple the solution can be.
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