Regularly spaced triple pleats, used for curtain, drapery, or valance headings. They can be formed by hand or using a decorator tape that either pulls up with cords or has pockets for special pleater hooks. See French pleats.
Process of dividing drapery pleats into equally smaller pleats and sewing them together at the bottom right edge of the fabric.
Pleats that are divided into two or three smaller pleats and sewn together at the bottom.
the top area of a drape where the main pleat is divided into two or three smaller, equal pleats, sewn together at the bottom edge on the right side of the fabric
drapery heading where the basic pleat is divided into two or three smaller, equal pleats, sewn together at the bottom edge on the right side of the fabric
A style of draperies where the heading is a basic pleat that is divided into two or three smaller equal pleats.(See example)
A style of pleat, usually triple folded, used at the header of curtain window treatments.
Where individual drapery pleats are equally divided into smaller pleats and sewn together at the bottom of the pinched pleats.
A popular finish for curtain headings consisting of symmetrical, stitched-down triple pleats, separated by flat areas. Also called French pleats.
Pinch pleats are curtain headings in which the basic pleat is divided into two or three smaller, equal pleats that are sewn together at the bottom edge on the right side of the fabric.
Small, gathered pleats used on the top construction of formal drapes. More info