[Frameworks] reflective white material

Toni-Lynn Frederick tlfrederick at icloud.com
Fri May 27 07:20:26 UTC 2016


Hi

If you want inexpensive, you can buy a roll of plastic table cloth material from a party store, and cut it to the desired length.  It hangs lovely, and can take front or rear projection. Of course, there’s always just regular canvas. I’ve used both materials and they work just fine, though I sprayed the canvas with super hot water to make it nice and taut.

Best of luck — and please let us know what you end up using, and how that goes for you!

TL Frederick


 
On May 26, 2016, at 6:48 PM, drawclose.com <snowbloods.parasol at gmail.com> wrote:

> Blackout fabric in white are my favorite for this. You can buy blackout fabric at Joanne's Fabrics for between 9 and 12 dollars/yard on a 48" width. Ask a salesperson to show you. They give blindingly good projection surface. 
> 
> The (enormous) portable screen I made for projection work (in bars & rock & roll venues) cost $150 including using grommets along one long edge - I ZipTie or safety pin in place at the venue. 
> 
> Jessica
> 
> *****
> http://www.drawclose.com
> 
> On May 26, 2016, at 4:28 PM, Christopher Ball <cbifilms at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
>> Silk and diffusion materials from your local grip-electric equipment supplier works well.  With silks you can rear-screen project, with thicker materials like muslin you can front project.   They will have a wide selection and it's usually pretty inexpensive, and they also can come with frames and stands so they're flexible and easy to set up. 
>> 
>> On May 26, 2016 5:26 PM, "Mark Street" <mstreet430 at gmail.com> wrote:
>> >
>> >
>> > Hey All,
>> >
>> > I'm looking to explore projecting images on the floor, wall and ceiling of a gallery space in the coming weeks.  I envision some sort of reflective screen like material (inexpensive) that I could lay on the floor or suspend from the ceiling.  I guess I could use a bedsheet!....  any other suggestions out there?  I'm thinking of just getting a few dropcloth sized pieces and playing around, but I don't know what material to seek out.  Any suggestions welcome.
>> >
>> > all best,
>> > mark Street
>> > www.markstreetfilms.com
>> >
>> >
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