Motorized Shades & Window Treatment Installation in Chicago
Motorized shades, curtain tracks, curtains, blinds, and window treatments installed cleanly with proper alignment, support, and finish.
Clean window treatments start before drilling.
Many failed installs come from treating every rod, track, or shade the same way. I plan around the actual surface, weight, span, bracket layout, and motor access so the treatment is supported, aligned, and built to last.
Request InstallationNo shortcut installs
I do not treat every rod, track, shade, or blind the same. The support method changes with the surface, span, hardware, and weight.
Failed installs corrected
I often repair or redo installs with loose brackets, sagging tracks, crooked rods, stripped anchors, or holes left from guesswork.
Full-span planning
Long tracks, wide windows, heavy fabric, and motorized systems are planned around bracket spacing and support so they do not sag or pull loose.
Prepared for the surface
Drywall, plaster, masonry, trim, and ceiling installs require different anchors, drilling methods, and preparation before the hardware goes up.
Window Treatments FAQ
Tracks, motorized systems, tall windows, wall type, and clean placement.
Request InstallationI install curtain rods, curtain tracks, ceiling-mounted tracks, blinds, shades, motorized systems, drapery hardware, and similar window treatment systems.
Yes. Tracks and motorized shades need cleaner alignment and stronger planning than basic rods. I check the mounting surface, bracket layout, power or control requirements, and whether the system has enough support across the full span.
Yes. Ceiling-mounted tracks and treatments are possible when the ceiling condition and hardware allow it. I check the surface first and use proper anchors or structural support instead of relying on weak fasteners.
Yes. Different surfaces need different drill bits, anchors, and techniques. Plaster, masonry, concrete, tile, and drywall are not treated the same because the wrong hardware can loosen over time.
I plan the height, reveal, projection, centerline, bracket spacing, and relationship to the window, ceiling, trim, and floor before drilling. The goal is a clean finished look, not just hardware attached to the wall.
Yes. Tall windows, high ceilings, and large spans may require ladders, extra setup, stronger hardware, or an additional installer. Access and safety are considered before the job is scheduled.
Yes. I can help confirm whether the treatment should sit inside or outside the window opening, how high it should be, how far it should extend, and whether wall or ceiling mounting will look better.
Yes. I can install client- or designer-supplied rods, tracks, brackets, shades, and hardware. If something is missing or not strong enough for the wall, I will point that out before installing it.
I do not rely on weak box hardware when the treatment needs better support. If I decide supplied hardware is not strong or high-quality enough for the system, I replace it with professional-grade hardware selected for the load and surface.
Yes, when the support is right. Heavy fabric, long tracks, wide windows, and multi-panel systems need careful bracket spacing and secure mounting so the system does not sag, flex, or pull loose.
Installation and mounting can be handled as part of the project. Any new electrical wiring or hardwired power work is usually done in tandem with a licensed electrician when needed.
Send photos of the windows and hardware, number of windows, treatment type, approximate length and height, wall or ceiling type if known, ZIP code or neighborhood, and preferred day or time.