1. Core material composition
Main material - polyester fiber (polyester)
Features:
High strength and wear resistance (not easy to wear in daily use)
Wrinkle-resistant and drape-resistant (can remain crisp without high temperature setting)
Easy to dye (rich and stable colors)
Functional extension:
Mold and moisture-proof (suitable for humid areas)
UV resistance (blocks 86% of solar radiation)
Double-layer gauze structure:
Two layers of high-density gauze are interwoven to form micron-level pores - to achieve "physical filtering of light"
Surface treatment technology:
Spraying optical texture or coating (such as fishbone texture) to enhance the light scattering effect
2. The realization principle of "light-transmitting but not people-transmitting"
Technical means | Mechanism of action | Effect comparison |
Double-layer gauze superposition | The light refracts through the pores and enters the room softly; the external view cannot focus on details due to multiple refractions | Better than direct penetration of single-layer diamond sand/blinds |
High-weight weaving process | 400g/m² high-density weaving (ordinary window gauze is about 200g/m²), further blocking vision penetration | Thicker and more durable |
Optical coating/texture | (such as tiny fishbone pattern) atomizes strong light and blurs the outline of human figures | Still provides some privacy protection when turning on the lights at night |
3. Functional advantages and scene adaptation
Core functions:
Privacy protection (completely "impenetrable" during the day, weakening human shadows at night)
Light adjustment (filtering strong light to retain 60%-70% natural light)
Heat insulation and sun protection (reducing ultraviolet radiation and indoor temperature)
Recommended applicable scenarios:
Preferred areas: living room/balcony (need to balance lighting and privacy)
Bedroom bay window (replaces traditional blackout curtains + window gauze combination)
Areas of caution:
Bedrooms that require complete darkness (need to be used with blackout cloth)