Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.
What's the best way to block out area of mirror that doesn't have a monitor behind it?
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@Fozi Hi there, my hope was that I could make this somewhat frameless, because the mirror by nature is going to be rather fat, it might look less dominating if its frameless. So there is nothing ‘behind’ the mirror to hold the paper.
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@fribse I’m going to try with foil, you know, the kind for windows. It should be doable, and get a good result without bubbles, I’ve done that for our frontdoor, It’s going to be tricky, but if it succeeds, it should be good.
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I use black construction paper and tape it to the back of the glass. It sounds like the challenge is to get the paper attached without visible adhesive.
You might be able to use a spray adhesive. There are a couple types that are designed for attaching wood laminate. A light & even coat could work. You would have complete blackout with the paper instead of additional reduction in transmission like you would with the window foil.
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Hi,
I use black folie like oracal foil. It’s quit good.- you don’t pause your work at the mirror to wait for the paint it´s dry.
- you can use the space behind the foil for wires, the raspsberry …
- you can adapt it very quick to another display if your actually is broken or you decide to put a bigger one behind.
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@fribse I just used some 'blackout’cloth.
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Great, thankyou for the suggestions, I definetely have something to go with now.
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@bhepler What is ‘construction paper’? But, yes, the adhesive needs to be invisible.
I got some black foil for windows, I’m going to try and mount that, and put a flashlight to it, to see how well it does. The oracal foil mentioned by @Hubschra01 is very expensive, but probably also of better quality, I think I’m going to try that next. -
@fribse said in What's the best way to block out area of mirror that doesn't have a monitor behind it?:
@bhepler What is ‘construction paper’? But, yes, the adhesive needs to be invisible.
That may be an Americanism. It’s a thick paper used in craft projects that comes in a variety of bright colors. I was first introduced to it when I was 5 or so, cutting it up with safety scissors to make family portraits. It’s roughly the thickness of business card stock, but it comes in large sheets.
If you are familiar with the cartoon South Park, they use construction paper to make the characters and then animate them (or at least they did in the beginning).
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Ahh, ok, then I know exactly what it is :-)
I got some oracal651 as suggested by @Hubschra01 , but that was slightly more transparent than the one I already had. So I’m going to stick with the cheap stuff I already had, and return the oracal651.
@Goldjunge_Chriz is it correct that I can foil the back of the mirror and then cut through the foil without ruining the ‘mirror foil’ as that is applied to the front of the glass in your variant? -
I sent the oracal back (very expensive stuff) as I could get much cheaper and darker stuff from our local hardware store.
So I got the back covered with it, and then cut holes in it for the LED lights and monitor, it seems to work very well.