Most drapery today is made in other countries and shipped over with an American label affixed to the packaging, but there is a curtain style that is still made here in the USA and that would be cotton curtains. From putting the seeding the ground in Needville Texas, harvesting, processing through the cotton gin, and then on to textile mills where it made into thread, then curtain fabric for the window treatments in your home. Few consumer products can boast that the whole process stays here on mainland as Hawaii calls the lower forty-eight states.
Eyelet Curtains
The one hundred percent cotton logo can be found on many ready made curtains, and the eyelet or grommet variety have several styles, colors, and textures of cotton to choose from online or in local drapery stores, and of course the competing worlds of the national discount outlets. Finding these window curtain panels is not the problem; it is making a selection from such a huge diverse inventory that stymies most consumers. You can get a one hundred percent solid cotton set for about thirty dollars and up for a standard window size.
Tap Top Curtains
For about the same price this category is one of the most popular versions off the all organic window treatments in the readymade curtains niche, and there brands that command up to two hundred dollars per two panel set. These simple panels have loops built in that you slide right over the curtain rod instead of adding curtain rings like the eyelet type. This style provides an airy and country decorative flare that comes in thick solids, and semi sheer depths that offer a perfect addition to kitchen and or bath windows. Consider these as the most inexpensive overall as they require less physical requirements for installation.
Café Curtains
Another favorite for above the kitchen sink or the small window in the guest bath, and will do well in a pink or yellow gingham curtain fabric. The rod pocket design only requires a tension rod on top, but is popular in the double rod configuration that uses two spring loaded friction curtain poles to hold window covering in place. The café panel is usually a half covering that is set on the lower half of the window to provide a modest amount of privacy while letting an ample amount of daylight to filter in at the same time.