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I’ve been projecting straight onto the wall for years now - perfectly fine, does the job, no nonsense setup - and for the most part, I’ve had no reason to even think about changing it. But now the wall’s got a few hairline cracks, nothing dramatic, just the kind of thing that catches the light wrong, and of course once you notice it, you can’t not see it. So fine, maybe it’s time for a refresh.
And that’s where the so called “options” start getting ridiculous. Projector paint - which if you believe the hype is supposed to transform your wall into some professional grade cinema surface costs a small fortune once you go above 4.5m² and you still have to prep the wall within an inch of its life. Fill, sand, prime, then pray it doesn’t show every tiny bump once the light hits. Because, honestly, all the marketing in the world won’t change the fact that paint can’t not follow the surface it’s on.
So then there’s the DIY screen idea. Build a proper frame, stretch some projector fabric - maybe even mount it directly to the wall, and at least you’re not relying on the plaster being perfect. And yes, I’ve seen plenty of people claim it’s “easy” and “worth it,” but let’s not pretend that building something dead flat, square, and tensioned evenly over 140 inches is just a Sunday afternoon job. And the off the shelf frames? All of them seem obsessed with slapping a huge black border on the front like that somehow makes it “professional.” Maybe it helps some projectors, fine, but if it cuts into the image and draws the eye, then it’s not helping, is it?
To anyone who’s actually done it, not just watched a YouTube video and called it research, what’s the real world experience of making a fixed frame screen this size? Was it actually a clean success, or one of those “looked good on paper until you started cutting timber and cursing at fabric” sort of jobs?
Does it stay tight over time, or do you end up fiddling with it every few months as it sags?
And, for anyone who’s gone down the paint route, was it genuinely better, or just a case of convincing yourself the cost was worth it? Because honestly, I can’t not think the fabric solution is the more sensible route, but I’d rather hear it from someone who’s lived with both before I start throwing money and weekends at it.
So projector paint or DIY screen? Which one actually holds up, and which one’s just a waste of patience dressed up as an "upgrade"?
And that’s where the so called “options” start getting ridiculous. Projector paint - which if you believe the hype is supposed to transform your wall into some professional grade cinema surface costs a small fortune once you go above 4.5m² and you still have to prep the wall within an inch of its life. Fill, sand, prime, then pray it doesn’t show every tiny bump once the light hits. Because, honestly, all the marketing in the world won’t change the fact that paint can’t not follow the surface it’s on.
So then there’s the DIY screen idea. Build a proper frame, stretch some projector fabric - maybe even mount it directly to the wall, and at least you’re not relying on the plaster being perfect. And yes, I’ve seen plenty of people claim it’s “easy” and “worth it,” but let’s not pretend that building something dead flat, square, and tensioned evenly over 140 inches is just a Sunday afternoon job. And the off the shelf frames? All of them seem obsessed with slapping a huge black border on the front like that somehow makes it “professional.” Maybe it helps some projectors, fine, but if it cuts into the image and draws the eye, then it’s not helping, is it?
To anyone who’s actually done it, not just watched a YouTube video and called it research, what’s the real world experience of making a fixed frame screen this size? Was it actually a clean success, or one of those “looked good on paper until you started cutting timber and cursing at fabric” sort of jobs?
Does it stay tight over time, or do you end up fiddling with it every few months as it sags?
And, for anyone who’s gone down the paint route, was it genuinely better, or just a case of convincing yourself the cost was worth it? Because honestly, I can’t not think the fabric solution is the more sensible route, but I’d rather hear it from someone who’s lived with both before I start throwing money and weekends at it.
So projector paint or DIY screen? Which one actually holds up, and which one’s just a waste of patience dressed up as an "upgrade"?
