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A Slice of Shade: Creating Canopies7 Ratings (See All) ![]() Create a cool spot for summer living with one of our easy canopies. All by itself, a simple canopy can turn an empty space outside into a "place." While trees might take years to grow, an expanse of cloth goes up in minutes, providing shade wherever you need it most. When the outdoor season ends -- or a storm whips in unexpectedly -- you can take it down, quick as a wink. Unlike a pricey pergola or arbor, which demands a permanent surrender of ground, a canopy requires scant commitment or expense. For the most basic version, spend a few dollars on a drop cloth from a hardware store, and a few more on the supplies you will need to suspend it overhead: a grommet kit, tent poles, stout cord, and sturdy pegs. These ideas can be modified for other settings and styles. You can sew a canopy yourself, or have one stitched by a seamstress or sailmaker. You'll need a few things from a hardware store, garden center, or camping-supply store to put up the fabric you choose. The way you erect the canopy depends on where you want it to be -- it can be suspended from poles, or stretched between a wall or roofline and poles. Tools and Materials - An inexpensive canvas drop cloth can serve as a fine canopy. - Stout clothesline or venetian-blind cord will keep a canopy in place. - Wooden pole with dowel pin or bamboo pole with dowel - Adjustable aluminum tent poles can be raised or lowered to fit your setting. Attached to a Wall or Fence How-To To fashion a patterned tent, sew together two full-size lightweight cotton bedspreads, creating a reinforced 2-inch overlap in the center. Punch grommet holes in the corners, and one on each end of the center overlap. Cut a third bedspread to make full-length, 6-inch-wide border strips. Stitch one to either side of the fabric, which adds hanging borders. To put up the peaked canopy, use a tall pole for the center and shorter poles for either side; attach screw eyes in corresponding spots on the house.
Free-Standing Canopy How-To Tips - Grommets at the corners of the fabric fit over poles in front and are tied to screw eyes on the house - Loop cord around the poles to keep the fabric in place and attached to pegs in the lawn for added stability - Tie extra fabric to the cords to make them more visible so no one will trip over them - Canopy poles get added stability by fitting them into lengths of PVC pipe and sinking the pipe into soil-filled terra-cotta pots - Painted wooden dowels and colored cord make the canopy's mechanics part of the picture - Take the tent down when not in use to discourage fading
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