Red and gold Boy Scout neckerchiefs make the perfect curtain tieback.
From the denverpost.com
Flip a decorative wall hook from vertical to horizontal to make a singular curtain tieback.
From the boston.com
To give it a finished look, wallpaper the closet interior and hang tieback draperies where the doors were.
From the news-journalonline.com
The liner-tieback option also takes more time to install, requiring several additional days to complete.
From the sacbee.com
She spent the next three years working on a sub-sea tieback from the Rhum gas field to the Bruce platform.
From the independent.co.uk
A needlepoint cross-stitch strip found on both sofa and curtain tieback introduces a whimsical note.
From the thestate.com
Pull the curtain aside with a tieback or holdback as desired.
From the kansas.com
A tieback is a horizontal wire or rod, or a helical anchor used to reinforce retaining walls for stability.
From the en.wikipedia.org
The deal is valued at $40 million and includes 10 production risers, tieback connectors and installation tools.
From the chron.com
More examples
Pullback: a device (as a decorative loop of cord or fabric) for holding or drawing something back; "the draperies were drawn to the sides by pullbacks"
A tieback is a horizontal wire or rod, or a helical anchor used to reinforce retaining walls for stability. ...
(Tiebacks) fabric bands, cords, or other material that shapes the curtain or drape and holds them back from the window.
(Tiebacks) Fabric strips that hold drapery panels or curtains open.
(Tiebacks) Decorative pieces of hardware, sometimes called holdbacks. Available in many forms and designed to hold curtains or draperies back from the window to allow light passage or to add an additional decorative touch to the window treatment.
(tiebacks) Cables used to hold bathtub in place during construction of the World Trade Center. New tiebacks may be needed to hold the bathtub in place during recovery operations.
The act of connecting a well to the manifold and production system.
A fastener attached to the sides of a window to hold back curtains.
A line attached to a secondary stump from the main anchor stump to distribute the load on the anchor. Commonly used where one large stump is not available to provide adequate anchorage.