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Discussion Starter · #1 ·
Right now I feel certifiably insane. Anyone remember the first time they bought black paint and started painting the room Black?! This just seems wrong for some reason. All my life I have painted rooms white, cream, almond, ... and tried my best to make them look super nice like a model home. And now I find myself painting over the white walls I so carefully painted about a year ago, all because I caught the projector bug! So out comes the TV and in with the 120" AT screen. Since this is my first build, will you help me with a question I have? I don't have access to rigid fiberglass. I want to put some on the wall behind the screen. What else can I use? I read that someone used Roxul? If so, do I need to cover the Roxul with black fabric? Can I use the pink stuff? I can go about 12 inches thick.
 

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Discussion Starter · #3 ·
Ooooo, I have panel envy!
 

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I work in a theatre, so black walls don't feel as foreign to me as that do to others. But the first time most people get themselves into a space that doesn't have light-reflective surfaces, it's unnerving.

The black panels on the powder-blue walls look really nice. I like the contrast there. Perhaps this throws me into the crazy bucket with the rest of you, but I think darker panels look better than lighter ones... even if it isn't a high contrast with the background color.

Question for the OP: Is that a gloss black, or is the paint still wet in those pics?
 

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Discussion Starter · #5 ·
The paint was still wet. It's Flat Black. Things are progressing, slowly but surely. I picked up some black burlap today to cover the Roxul.
 

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My panels are 6" thick. I used this stuff from Lowes.

Paper Paper product


I use 1x6 to frame them and bought some cheap fabric from hobby lobby. I have heard about people using the pink stuff. But I went with this. It has helped...but mine appear to only work down to about 60 hertz.
 

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The old time cinemas and theaters were always dark/deep red. Walls, seats,carpets, lights just about everything, because next to black, dark red is the least reflective and gives a nice inviting warm fuzzy feeling.
 

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Discussion Starter · #8 ·
I love that feeling. Good to know about dark red.
 

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The LCR too high,Especially the middle center speaker ,If you sit on the sofa ,Tell me,How high are your ears from the ground?My ears are 1200mm from the ground.Remember, Don't wrong,I mean the height of the speakers' tweeter
 

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Very few people have the courage to paint black. Most people live in a conforming world of beige or white (yuk). The black will look WAY better. Use some cool lighting tricks will be very unique. Halogen down lights will give you puddles of light on the floor to see where your walking. I would not use any scatter lighting at all. Keep it dim and dark.
 

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I agree that black is an unattractive color for a home theater. When I built mine, I searched the Internet for a suitable paint and found Munsell flat gray water-based vinyl paint. It is specially formulated to have a spectrally flat response without any color bias. It won't change the color of the image on a movie screen (no tints in it; only black and white in the mix). It comes in three shades of gray: light, medium, and dark. I chose the medium shade (Standard Gray Neutral 7), which looks great. It is rather expensive, though; about $95/gallon.
 

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