Preview curtains in your bedroom
Curtain color reads completely differently in your bedroom light vs. the showroom — and length is a measuring-tape gamble most people lose. PlopIt hangs the exact curtain at your window so you can judge color, drop, and how it pools (or doesn't) at the floor.


What this preview is solving
- Sheer vs. blackout — see the actual light behavior in your room
- Catches length mistakes before the order
- Compare two or three colorways side by side
How to try this with your own room
- 1Snap a photo of your space — phone camera is fine. Good light helps.
- 2Paste an Amazon link or upload the product image you're considering.
- 3PlopIt drops the product into your room at the right scale and lighting.
Other demos to explore
Frequently asked questions
How long should bedroom curtains be?
Three common options: floor-grazing (just kissing the floor, cleanest look), break (about half an inch onto the floor, traditional), or puddle (2-6 inches pooling, more dramatic). Sill-length curtains generally look unfinished in bedrooms. Measure from where you'll mount the rod (usually 4-6 inches above the window frame) to the floor, then pick a curtain length that matches.
Should bedroom curtains be sheer or blackout?
Blackout if you're light-sensitive or work nights — they block almost all incoming light. Sheers if you want privacy without losing daylight; they soften the room without darkening it. Many people layer both: sheers behind a heavier curtain on a double-track rod, so you can switch between soft daytime light and full blackout for sleep.
Why does the curtain color look different at home than on the website?
Curtain colors are photographed under bright studio lighting against white walls, which tends to make colors look more saturated and lighter than they read in a real room. Warm bedroom lighting shifts beiges yellower, cool LED lighting pushes them gray. Previewing the actual fabric against a photo of your room catches this before the curtains arrive.
Can I see how curtains look in my room before buying?
Yes — upload a photo of your bedroom window and the curtain's product image or link to PlopIt. It hangs them at the right length and color in the photo, so you can judge before ordering. Comparing two or three colorways side by side is the easiest way to settle the "is the beige too yellow?" debate.





