Mike Jay wrote:But now here's a thought. If the top and bottom of your curtains aren't particularly tight to the wall, does that create an area of cold air between the curtain and the glass that tries to sink? Then it pulls warm air down from above the curtain, past the window to cool, etc. In effect creating a cooling loop of air?
Since I've lived in a solar heated house in a cold climate for the past 20 some years, I've got a lot of experience with trying various things to keep the heat in the house. Even the simplest loosest curtain at night helps make the room feel warmer. You can clearly feel the difference in comfort. And a huge difference by morning. I think that's probably the radiant heat, and a bit of conduction out that big cold plate of glass.
When it gets to the coldest months of winter, January, I add an extra curtain made of a blanket. I don't have a fancy curtain rod assembly, I just screwed some hooks into the wooden lintel, and sewed some little loops on a blanket. It so happens that some small summer blankets we have fit the window almost perfectly when folded in half. The window is in the middle of the thick adobe wall, so there's a 6-inch sill on the inside. Usually I push the bottom of the curtain back towards the window on the coldest nights, but it doesn't probably make a huge difference. When the weather warms up and the days get longer in February I either leave a corner uncovered so the room won't be so dark in the morning, or I get lazy and don't put the curtain on at all.