| Spring Valley Shutters |
For over 30 years, French Shutters has been delivering top notch shutters, louvers, and closet doors to residents of Spring Valley. Simply put, custom French Shutter exterior shutters provide a level of finish that is historically accurate and architecturally correct; it is a look that sets a home apart. When custom shutters are built and installed correctly you can see the difference. They are built by fine craftsmen with the same skill and finesse that is used in making high-quality wood furniture. By comparison, generic or “stock” shutters typically come in standard sizes, usually in four inch increments, which means that the shutter may be too long or too short for your window. Custom shutters are made so when they close, they meet perfectly in the middle, and louvered styles can be fully operational, allowing you to open and shut the louvers. Our customized wooden shutters, louvers, closet doors, and handpicked exterior shutter hardware provide you with the highest quality and greatest flexibility for achieving the desired appearance you strive for in your home. We have standardized the custom creation process for exterior shutter hardware and set the bar higher than any of these companies who try to replicate our product can reach. CLICK HERE TO VIEW OUR GALLERY There is no way a replica or competitor knock-off can match the significant time and expense French Shutters has made over the years to develop what we feel is simply the best shutter hardware available today. Our craftsmanship and attention to detail has delivered Spring Valley residents the finest shutters, louvers, and closet doors to beautify your home! Your choice of exterior shutter hardware will also depend on whether you want your shutters to be functional or purely decorative. It will also depend on what sort of security you want your shutters to provide. If your aim is functionality, tie-backs and hinges are a minimum, but for the sturdy security for which wooden shutters were originally prized, a slide bolt or other type of shutter lock is what you would want. The value of customized exterior shutter hardware is apparent the moment the hardware is installed on your home. The high level of craftsmanship and the use of traditional materials will preserve the essence of these shutters, so that they can endure for generations. Our exterior shutter hardware selection is guaranteed to provide you with the perfect fit for your shutters and for your home. You can expect our closet doors and louvers to have the same high quality as any of the competitors in the market. Here is a partial list of available shutters and louvers: • Wood Shutters • Composite Shutters • Polyfoam Shutters • Vinyl Shutters • Horizontal Wood Blinds • Exterior Painted Louvers • Interior Closet Doors • Interior Painted Louvers Testimonial: Thank you for helping us to sell our home. Your shutters did the trick. An entertainer from Los Angeles bought it the second day on the market. Thanks also for filling me in on the total cost of the shutters. We purchased them over six or seven years and I lost track. Hope you like the way we used your name to advertise our home. We’ll contact you about our new home and its shutter needs. Sincerely, Coleam Lewis (Herb) More about Spring Valley, California Spring Valley is an unincorporated community in San Diego County, California, United States. The community includes the neighborhood of La Presa and part of the neighborhood of Casa de Oro (which extends into unincorporated La Mesa). The United States Census Bureau has divided Spring Valley into two census-designated places (CDPs), Spring Valley and La Presa. The population of Spring Valley was 59,384 at the 2000 census. This figure combines the population of the Spring Valley CDP (26,633) and the La Presa CDP (32,721). There are claims that the Greater Spring Valley area has over 100,000 residents although this claims large areas that are actually unincorporated parts of La Mesa and El Cajon. Spring Valley is named for the natural spring located there. It was long the home of the Kumeyaay tribe, who called it Neti or Meti. Spanish conquerors drove off the natives and used the area for cattle, calling it El aguaje de San Jorge (St. George's Spring). In 1863 Judge Augustus S. Ensworth of San Diego filed a claim for a 160 acre (647,000 m²) ranch that included the spring. The ranch, and the small adobe house he built there, were sold to Rufus King Porter and later to historian Hubert Howe Bancroft. The adobe is now a National Historic Landmark. |

