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The glass should work for dry erase markers without any further modification. Do they need a "white board" dry erase board? Just have them buy those fluorescent markers...
I can't see why the stilts wouldn't be a useful tool. I've done plenty of jobs that required a ladder that could've been accomplished on stilts -- think of the $$ saved if I hadn't have had to drive the big van to the install.
It's like anything else -- practice enough and it will be easy...
This can also happen if one side you feed isn't square to your laminator. One side will have tension while the other side will have slack. You should be able to check with a ruler and a level.
+1
I used them ONCE. We cut a piece of 4x4 to use as a block to pound them into the ground -- very hard to get in square to each other and plumb...
Within a month the sign had blown over...
I've been working with laminators for years and am always looking and thinking about more efficient ways to mount and lam things... but have never considered trying to do both sides at once... With things like double sided coro yard signs (18x24ish) I will lay a 4x8 sheet, flip, lay a second 4x8...
Well. Here, I'm happier in this one.
http://www.xtranormal.com/watch/6895349/
Aaaannd.... the final. (Probably.)
http://www.xtranormal.com/watch/6895501/
Your movie rocks and that website is awsome.
I threw one together quickly for one of my coworkers who is way to positive for a Monday morning.
http://www.xtranormal.com/watch/6895251/
We have printed on a semi-stretchy material in the past... I think it was from LexJet, but not "Spandex" or "Lycra". Also... it was for the my aqueous printer -- they may have something for the solvent at this point.
The big thing that was kind of a pain -- but the only way that kind of...
I was trying to give them something a little more finished looking... I could build them out of foam core and velcro, but we are shooting for high end not grade school science fair.
My reason for saying it would have to be a 9'x12' sheet is that when one "unfolds" a cube it comes out shaped like a cross. 3 panels tall by 4 panels. I would think that if it was going to be done with a router and be folded into shape you would want it to be one piece.
They want to be able to move it and re-use it. I'm going to try to push them towards using some sort right angle of clip... that way the cubes can be broken down to be stored and the images can be rearranged or replaced whenever they feel like it.
At first I thought this was a great idea... but then I thought about it -- if I wanted them to be 3'x3' the sheet that the flat cube would be cut from would have to be at least 9'x12'...
I have a customer that wants a display like the one in the attached photo. Can one buy these cubes somewhere? I know I've used some panel systems that could probably be made into a cube, but it was at a different job and I don't know who the manufacturer was...
Any ideas? (We've talked about...
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