Thursday, December 18, 2014

That chest of drawers ain’t what it used to be – not with UV rays coming through the window

Remember when you found that chest of drawers in the back of that furniture store. You really weren't planning to buy anything that day. But then you came around the corner and there it was along with a bed and nightstand.

You had no interest in the other pieces – just the chest of drawers. It called to you. You knew just where to put it. It was as though you’d something you’d long searched for but never knew you were searching.

The cost was a little more than you wanted to spend but there’s a sense of permanence to a piece of furniture, such as this, that made the cost acceptable. It transformed the back room – made it complete. When the sun came in the window each morning, the rays of light seemed to dance off the polyurethane finish.

You’d appreciated that chest of drawers for years. One of your most prized possessions, you took comfort knowing, when your time came, the chest of drawers would go to your daughter and then, one day, to hers. There was only one thing you didn't plan for.

The sun sucks the life out of your furniture

It turns out the sun did more than dance on your chest of drawer’s finish; it also dried the polyurethane and the wood below it. It faded the color of the wood.

The drawers didn’t slide the way the used to slide. The piece just wasn't the same.

How did that happen? Right in front of you, your chest of drawers changed. It grew old in ways you didn't appreciate.

This is what happens to furniture when exposed to the ultra-violet rays of the sun. Those rays are silently powerful and consistent, as though the surf is wearing a rock smooth.

Curtains can reduce the effects of UV rays but they seldom eliminate the rays. And when the curtains are drawn, you can no longer look outside through the window. You might as well replace the window with a solid wall. There is, however, one other option.

Window film, such as the window film produced by 3M, actually blocks 99.9 percent of the sun’s ultra-violet rays. Window film would have preserved the chest of drawers in the story above, as well as other pieces of furniture, flooring and even paint on the walls.

In the meantime, tinted window film can cut down the heat produced by the sun, heat you then spend money to remove from your home or office with air conditioning. Window film can also reduce the glare that comes through the windows.


tint windows


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