The idea is to create a simple backdrop that can be assembled/built at home for non-ideal workspaces.
More than one final version may happen depending on how it goes.
-Inspirations
- Pop up Chromakey screens or lighting panels that use a spring steel ring to expand. Sort of like the fold up frisbees.
- Also, the company that makes chair mounted Chromakey screens (darn good idea, if you want to just buy one go there instead. I'll add the link later when I find them again.)
So while I’ve been working on other things (and the possibility of returning to an office loomed) I found another way of hanging a large sheet backdrop… and it was probably the worst so far.
The rod is an expandable shower curtain rod. These are 1” diameter and are meant to press fit between two walls with an internal spring.
This was hung from the drop ceiling with two short sections of Velcro as a quick test.
The end result was a solid meh 😑. The rod is about 2” too short for the photography backdrop I have been testing with so it was crumpled. It also needed part of the length hung over the back otherwise it slipped off. A smaller rod may have been better since I could use clamps to hold the backdrop.
Finally, it was still an nuisance to hang the backdrop when I needed it. So not there yet.
Hopefully I get my spring frame sorted out so my original plan can continue.
So I found a substitute for black backdrop fabric. This is Landscaping cloth that you may have a roll of hiding in the garage. It usually comes in rolls big enough to cover my yard twice over so definitely look online for roll ends or ask anyone that recently did some landscaping. The piece behind it is actual photography backdrop.
The actual backdrop is thicker but I think it will for well for the price point(free.)
Note - Why didn't I just tape/pin something on the wall behind me:
In the space I'm using, I share it with...stuff. Specifically stuff that is tall enough to end up on camera and can't be moved. So I needed something that could be not much further than my chair.
This is what I started with. I used a borrowed black photography backdrop and a large selection of big binder clips. (2" - 3" Large ones worked best)
This only works because I had a low ceiling with drop in tiles.
Hold one side of the backdrop up, then clip it in place. Starting by clipping both corners while holding the middle seemed to work best. Otherwise the weight will cause it to slip out.
Problems
Difficult to put up
No easy was to relocate it
Requires the right ceiling (Drop in tiles with rails)
There was always a chance of backing into it/ bumping it and causing a dramatic reveal.
I was worried the clips might damage the backdrop fabric over time
The single layer backdrop didn't fully block light from the window behind it.