I've found that to be an 'efficient' photographer, a lot of these kinds of hacks have to be done as there's almost never a fully-designed off-the-shelf product that will cater to your needs. Love seeing this ingenuity!
As a wedding photographer I completely agree! In addition to the obvious gear, my bag also carries paper tissues, hairspray and foam earbud to mention a few. All things I've learned comes in very handy! To me, it all proves that photography is way more than your traditional photography gear.
For the hook plate and swivel interface you could use simply a bolt (instead of the pin) with a two nuts securing the hook plate in the middle (instead of the many washers) and one locknut on the outside to prevent the bolt from coming out. Bolts are incredibly strong in that kind of a shear load situation, so strength would not be a concern.
Lee here: What you/we need to make is a system that can either make 2 rolls side by side or it can swing over like yours does and make a 90-degree corner with 2 rolls of paper without a seam. Not sure how it can be done but there must be a way.
Instead of using the single J hook on the boxer-unit (great find!!) bolt a piece of wood in between, and bolt a double J on that, maybe? Preferably I'd look for a plated swivel system like you see on wheels simply for the sturdiness, but then you'd lose the angular motion you now have in the boxing module thing. So that still looks like your best option.. I love what you did n there though, great idea!!
If I understood right (my English is not the best for sure), I have an idea for 2 rolls that could add 2 more, so you could hung 4 rolls in total. I could draw it because explaining it could be confuse. Anyways I'll try it. 1) Is the same system that Patrick build but using the axis he use for a single roll as a rotator. 2) Then on both sides use a + (cross? crux?) shape where you attach a roll (with the same system Patrick use with that piece that insert in to roll and unroll it) 3) Now it need to position each roll with a displacement to avoid the "chain" you use to roll and unroll the roll paper touch each other. Then we use a product called Sikadur 31. Is a mix of two products we use to fix bolts in climbing. So if you think it needs to load more weight, this is if not the best, a solid good option. I hope it has some sense. Again, I'm sorry about my English.
I do wonder...does the paper have enough rigidity that you could put the roll vertically and just bend it around a corner? Obviously then you have the problem of the gap between the floor and the backdrop, but that might be preferable in some circumstances.
You are genius...often times we just used products the way they were sold to us but I really like how you modify it to make it multi-purpose uses. I'm gonna have to give it a try too, thanks much!
The industry you’re looking for is the carpet showroom industry. They often mount 100+ lbs carpets on rotating/swiveling arms that customers can move to browse through. Glad you figured out a solution too!
Ah yes but those mounts don't let you hoist them up and down, they sort of just hang there. There are def times when I think the side backdrop will be stored rolled up and out of the way. -P
I am watching and thinking that you are a genius. When there is a problem we should use our imagination to create a solution which you just did and YES this big Photo giant companies are going to make one now! You did good man. Thanks for sharing
First great job. Consider using O-rings or hose gaskets on your swivel to provide rigidity with some give. The Dry Cleaning industry use tracks for moving the work from station to station. Something like that might work for you. I am sure there is something between the size of hospital curtain track and a ceiling mounted engine hoist that will work for you. It’s all a matter of finding it and making it work. Once again great job.
I like the pivot, that's necessary...but all you needed to do was put the kupo paper drive onto the tip of a c-stand with wheels. That would have given you the full range you were looking for from the 7' radius rail idea. No ladder needed and would be plenty strong to support. Just my two cents...I love videos like this though. You guys rock.
I wonder if it would be more efficient to face the ceiling hook in the direction of motion of the horizontal bar. That way the rod would not have to be moved up out of the hook, then under the hook, then over to the other location. Just a thought. With the hooks facing the direction of travel, the move under the hook can be avoided. Also, I found the key words Ball joint and universal joint productive to search for an articulating ceiling attachment.
Patrick, I think that's a lot of work for minimal gain when two sets of Autopoles would work. Did you think about using your existing three roll setup and using those Autopoles to mount the side fabric or seamless? There is a tutorial on doing a corner set over on John Gress' channel. BTW, perhaps you and Lee could do a followup on Coronavirus Chronicles because we all need another drinking game.
The original edit of this video I mention the autopole (Varipoles in my case). The problem with that idea is it places a huge liability on that pole which sits in the middle of the room. For our old studio it was fine because the paper was tucked away in a cove where you weren't likely to bump the pole but for this space I wanted it completely secured with nothing touching the ground. -P
@@FStoppers My initial thought was "Why not install just the main rotating piece, and then use a heavy duty stand w wheels on the other side?" But I didn't factor in you wanting the floorspace clear!!
This is such a great system! I'm working on designing a multi-use space similar in size to this, and will definitely be building something along these lines.
Fun stuff. I love thinking outside the box and being creative outside of photography. BUT I could never desocrate my garage like this :) .. I am a classic car guy too, so my garages are for cars, tools, and hiding from life ;) . My basement is my victimless studio, sewing room, guest room, etc .. Love the video ..
I just bumped into you channel. DUDE!!! I LOVE IT!!! I have been having this same studio problem. Thank you so much for sharing. I will start my project this coming weekend. Its time to go build something. :)
can't use any of this for my studio - HOWEVER.. love the rube goldberg.. hack it off/bolt it up/ fix with washers mentality...I'll look around your videos.. I'm sure there will be plenty I will use!
If you put that bracket on the other side of the roller cables, you could get an overlap right there no need for a third paper. Basicaly all you did moved 2-3 feet to the right. The down side is that you need to put it right up to the cealing and will probably not clear the light fixtures. It will also be more complicated to change the backdrop. And you don't need a rail, you have a mobile light stand with a special bracket, do you can do any angle you want.
Just use electrical tubing and have it rolled to what ever diameter you need then attach each end and in the middle for extra support and on have a pulley that sits on the tube and then just roll it to any position in the arc. It’s own weight will hold it in position. Use your stick to move it along the track. Should be a cake build. Thanks for the idea.
Well when mentioned that you were in a garage and you wanted to move something, my first thought was to use garage door hardware - rails and wheels. But cool that you figured all that out with the hooks and such.
I thought about the garage door hardware but I have no idea how to bend that stuff and when I look at mine closely, it seems to hold the door wheels in the track vertically but if I rotated the track sideways, the track doesn't seem like a very sturdy channel that would hold a trolley in it with weight and play/movement. A unistrut seems like the better material. -P
I do something almost like this. I use 2 autopoles with the background holders mounted. I can put it up solo in about 5 min and have any radius i want with out drilling into the ceiling of my studio
I created a scrim that hangs for a backdrop for headshots and then I can push it up and lock it with a door latch to bounce light off the ceiling since I have an unfinished basement. I also have it so that I can angle it by just tying it to a desired length.
that looks like a lot of work before i've finished my coffee. I'm remodeling a garage into a studio so i feel your pain. Since i don't have a roller system i'm just going to use baby pin wall plates and a couple of c-stand grip arms. I have a huge 6x9 window in the garage. I use magnetic plates to mount diffusion or black cloth over the window. Denny's mfgr sells them but i homebrewed one for cheaper. the punching bag swivel is very clever.
I love the gear hack. I've also done a lot of work with 80/20 extruded aluminum and you can do some pretty creative things with it when you think out of the box. I'm mouning the same backdrop supports in my apartment and I was on the fence about getting the aluminum tubes for my savage paper, but you've talked me into it. With the aluminum rods, do you ever see sagging over time with the 7 foot rolls?
i did a similar thing with curtains.. built a flexible arm out of wood and a curtain pole holds the curtain that is hangeable at some major points as support ;)
I would look at curtain tracks that they use in hospitals for that track you talked about. I use to do maintenance on them and thought that would be perfect but like you said its just finding the perfect one
I thought about those but the issue is, one of those nylon hangers would have to hold the entire weight of the roller (maybe it's 50% of the total weight). In the hospital, the entire curtain is supported by about 8-20 of those hangers but without hanging it like a curtain, and still maintaining the ability to roll it up, I don't feel confident that one of those systems would be strong enough instill confidence. -P
I think I might have come up with a solution that would not need you to take it down. By placing 1 unistrut from your 2 end points without a curve. Using a roller to get your outside peace of rail to move along that track. At your old fixed point, place another place on unistrut at a 90 degree angle from your 10 foot rail with another roller supporting your fixed point. This side only needs to be able 2.5 foot. This should give enuff flexibility in the tracks to let it all move from one end to the other end without running out of slack. I don't know if it will work in this location tho.
I struggled with drilling into concrete with a battery drill, even though the bits were good quality and new. I then tried a corded SDS masonry drill using the same bits and job was done very quickly.
It's funny, I had a strong corded hammer drill and it didn't work nearly as well as my battery powered drill. I do have a SDS drill now but I haven't opened it yet. I've found the smaller drill so easy to use that I've just stuck with that one. -P
@@FStoppers Just in case you were already using the stand. So for anyone who may not have an extra stand laying about or who may want a dedicated tool just for that purpose.
I love seeing how creative and capable people prove themselves to be when there's no immediate aileron available! I think you hit the whole solution on the head when you realised how to negate the need for the step ladder: just use tripod stands and forget having to screw into the ceiling. That said, if you don't have any issues with screwing into the ceiling, your solution is much faster for tidying everything away 😁😁 My only Dad Talk here is... please, for next time, some safety goggles and gloves 😉👍
I say patent a design for this kind of need when you can 🙌 I still remember many years ago when you wanted a Pocketwizard radio trigger and you made a drawing of trigger that was in a dual hotshoe with both connected to one another to get the function you wanted. Dunno if you remember Patrick 😅
Ha yeah I remember that design and I actually found a dual hotshoe just for that design. I've patented before (Flash Disc) and it was such a pain in the ass, cost a ton of money, and then China still just rips you off with no easy repercussions. Not sure I want to own another patent any time soon but I'm happy if someone just takes this idea and makes it accessible to the masses. -P
I built a system that swings three non paper backdrops 90 degrees so I can get to the one behind it when needed. Pretty easy set up... I own a pool service so I use old adjustable pool poles that go from 8 to about 15 1/5 ft and plenty strong as I only go to 10 ft max... I can have a back drop on the back of each so can have 6 that move and 2 mounted on the walls so with 2 walls and 3 poles I can have quick access to 8 backdrops ,,, fun to design and build ... your idea is cool too of course and more heavy duty ..(I was just in PR last week doing a few shoots)
Ah dang it, yes, I have all those video files here in Puerto Rico so I can now get back to editing those....that was def a much bigger studio renovation. I feel like I've built out 5 studios in the last 3 years. -P
Concrete is not fun but it doesn't make noise when your A/C unit shakes due to a bad motor/rotor, then you see nails popping out the wooden wall.... Plus no worries of Tornado damage. Also good for Hurricanes... all you need is the corrugated metal sheets to cover your windows which you can easily put and remove after the storm passes. I miss my concrete home.
Simply a genius. brilliant ideas. thank you sharing with us.💥💥💥, Can we use 2 in. x 10 ft. PVC Pipe Solid for $17 instead of the Fotoconic 10 Ft / 3M Metal Tube Crossbar for $49?
Well I guess the light stand and u hook could just be used to replace the ceiling mounts? Really cool idea, on how you adapt and MacGyver photography things. I appreciate these kinds of videos.
Not sure I follow. The J hooks hold the roll in. The U hook I used at the end would be upside down in the ceiling and wouldn't hold anything. You can of course use Light Stands but I didn't want clucky stands with large footprints in the middle of my studio space. -P
Hey Patrick .I too have a garage photo studio ( 3 car ) but that doesn’t matter . I called a garage door company and they removed the center automatic door opener and mounted motor’ on the wall next to the doors to open and close door . Which results in removing that obstacle out of the way for a overhead lighting set up . I’d send you pictures of before and after but don’t have a link to email them to you . I don’t want to post them on my social media pages as I’m trying to improve those to be 100 % professional . Jonathon Paape
That's an interesting idea. I just completely turned off my garage circuit breaker and don't expect to open my garage any time soon. With hurricane season, I'm actually probably going to reinforce it shut even more. -P
Any rolling vertical stabe pole system unit on the end of rolling backdrop, with nice large caster wheels, could do it. Peter Coulson (UA-cam) has every connected with caster wheels on his backdrops in his studio.
I just don't like the idea of a huge footprint in the middle of my space. Wheels could make it stable enough that if someone bumped into it, the system would just roll but I still don't want anything sticking out. Peter's studio is like an airplane hanger! -P
Instead of depending on something out at the tip. Make a heavier duty swivel at the wall so you can just swing it. That's how I would do it personally. Then you can make a drop down handle attached to it at the wall so you can swing it from the floor.
What if you use that very tripod to pan your back drop while on the floor? You can then position it any where within the length of the backdrop holder.
Really cool project. I’m curious though, if the light stand is long enough, can you just keep the roller on the light stand also and roll it up and down without the other hook?
Yeah def I just didn't want a lightstand in the middle of the room with bulky legs sticking out. I also have those varipoles that have very low profile but if you happened to knock into one, the whole thing is falling down. -P
@@FStoppers I know what you mean. I have the standard three paper role holder in my small studio and it is super not to have to fiddle with nightstands. Still the flexibility to have any angle you want by just extending a light stand without the hassle of setting everything up (since it is all already hanging at the ceiling) is a plus. BTW, a layout of the studio to show what angles you are considering shooting from would have helped understand what you needed to achieve. Cool video!
an idea for a made up rail system could be with a straigh rail perpendicular and a longer pole that can take the extra length, it would only work for less than a 90 degre range and practical for around 45 degrees range
Instead of the pole to unhook and rehook the backdrop, attach it to the backdrop with a caster ball on the bottom that rolls on the floor. Then you have your track system idea with infinite adjustability
I don't want anything touching my floor at all though. I don't want the trip hazard, and when I roll the backdrop up, I don't want a stand there that is need to keep it tucked away. -P
What about a curved curtain in the corner? Would that look really bad or a way to add depth in a small studio? 💡 idea gathering for my tiny space. Thanks
Instead of the washers to fill the space just get a piece of nylon bushing. It's a tubular shape that will fit over the pin, and you can cut it to the exact length you need.
I think I've tried fitting the plastic holders in these pipes but the pipes were too small inside. They might fit in the paper ream but the other hardware won't fit inside them. Maybe there is another option? -P
@@FStoppers I bought a pipe size large enough for the expan units to fit inside. I think they were around 2" inside diameter. There are also metal corners made for building frames for plastic covered tents, greenhouses, etc that are inexpensive and are designed for the smaller electrical conduit. Use them to make an overhead frame for your white diffuser silks. The Hollywood ears hold the frame to your c-stand knuckles.
You don't glue it. I actually use that rubber material you use to keep stuff from sliding in a motor home or maybe in your silverware drawer. Wrap a little of that on both ends and slide the tube through it tight. It grips it perfectly without it being completely permanent. -P
I'm going to have to address comments like these in the next video. If you use a lightstand, when you roll the backdrop up and out of the way, the stand is still in the middle of your room! -P
I’m not all the way through the video yet, but it sounds like you’re describing those hanging rug displays that move side to side like at TJ Maxx? Curious if I’m on the right track.. Or if not, if that might work.
Instead of having only two hooks for positions, keep that stand adapters on a tall stand and keep the roll on it. You can then walk to any position that you want.
I've found that to be an 'efficient' photographer, a lot of these kinds of hacks have to be done as there's almost never a fully-designed off-the-shelf product that will cater to your needs. Love seeing this ingenuity!
As a wedding photographer I completely agree! In addition to the obvious gear, my bag also carries paper tissues, hairspray and foam earbud to mention a few. All things I've learned comes in very handy! To me, it all proves that photography is way more than your traditional photography gear.
For the hook plate and swivel interface you could use simply a bolt (instead of the pin) with a two nuts securing the hook plate in the middle (instead of the many washers) and one locknut on the outside to prevent the bolt from coming out. Bolts are incredibly strong in that kind of a shear load situation, so strength would not be a concern.
Lee here: What you/we need to make is a system that can either make 2 rolls side by side or it can swing over like yours does and make a 90-degree corner with 2 rolls of paper without a seam. Not sure how it can be done but there must be a way.
Instead of using the single J hook on the boxer-unit (great find!!) bolt a piece of wood in between, and bolt a double J on that, maybe? Preferably I'd look for a plated swivel system like you see on wheels simply for the sturdiness, but then you'd lose the angular motion you now have in the boxing module thing. So that still looks like your best option..
I love what you did n there though, great idea!!
If I understood right (my English is not the best for sure), I have an idea for 2 rolls that could add 2 more, so you could hung 4 rolls in total. I could draw it because explaining it could be confuse. Anyways I'll try it.
1) Is the same system that Patrick build but using the axis he use for a single roll as a rotator.
2) Then on both sides use a + (cross? crux?) shape where you attach a roll (with the same system Patrick use with that piece that insert in to roll and unroll it)
3) Now it need to position each roll with a displacement to avoid the "chain" you use to roll and unroll the roll paper touch each other.
Then we use a product called Sikadur 31. Is a mix of two products we use to fix bolts in climbing. So if you think it needs to load more weight, this is if not the best, a solid good option.
I hope it has some sense.
Again, I'm sorry about my English.
I do wonder...does the paper have enough rigidity that you could put the roll vertically and just bend it around a corner? Obviously then you have the problem of the gap between the floor and the backdrop, but that might be preferable in some circumstances.
I love how proud of himself Patrick was when he realized he could use something he already had to move the roller.
You are genius...often times we just used products the way they were sold to us but I really like how you modify it to make it multi-purpose uses. I'm gonna have to give it a try too, thanks much!
Thanks! That looks really good!
The industry you’re looking for is the carpet showroom industry. They often mount 100+ lbs carpets on rotating/swiveling arms that customers can move to browse through. Glad you figured out a solution too!
Ah yes but those mounts don't let you hoist them up and down, they sort of just hang there. There are def times when I think the side backdrop will be stored rolled up and out of the way. -P
Hey Patrick, thanks for the tips and insight. FYI, necessity is the mother of all inventions...great job!
I am watching and thinking that you are a genius. When there is a problem we should use our imagination to create a solution which you just did and YES this big Photo giant companies are going to make one now! You did good man. Thanks for sharing
Finally! The same energy as Joe Edelman and the slated lens of 2015 era. Other home studio channels!!
Very logical thought process! Even towards the end I thought about suggesting a stick to adjust the roll and moments later you did.
First great job. Consider using O-rings or hose gaskets on your swivel to provide rigidity with some give.
The Dry Cleaning industry use tracks for moving the work from station to station. Something like that might work for you.
I am sure there is something between the size of hospital curtain track and a ceiling mounted engine hoist that will work for you. It’s all a matter of finding it and making it work. Once again great job.
Would like to see a Video on that Idea!!!!
Brilliant solution and Welldone with the ladderless hack! Genius.
Such a smart idea. Need to experiment with some alternate mounts for the spaces I use.
I really love your ingenious and cost-effective solutions. :)
I love the ingenuity! Thanks for sharing this experience 🙂
I like the pivot, that's necessary...but all you needed to do was put the kupo paper drive onto the tip of a c-stand with wheels. That would have given you the full range you were looking for from the 7' radius rail idea. No ladder needed and would be plenty strong to support. Just my two cents...I love videos like this though. You guys rock.
I thought the same thing but then I realized that he probably does not want anything to stand on the floor.
I wonder if it would be more efficient to face the ceiling hook in the direction of motion of the horizontal bar. That way the rod would not have to be moved up out of the hook, then under the hook, then over to the other location. Just a thought. With the hooks facing the direction of travel, the move under the hook can be avoided. Also, I found the key words Ball joint and universal joint productive to search for an articulating ceiling attachment.
Patrick, I think that's a lot of work for minimal gain when two sets of Autopoles would work. Did you think about using your existing three roll setup and using those Autopoles to mount the side fabric or seamless? There is a tutorial on doing a corner set over on John Gress' channel. BTW, perhaps you and Lee could do a followup on Coronavirus Chronicles because we all need another drinking game.
The original edit of this video I mention the autopole (Varipoles in my case). The problem with that idea is it places a huge liability on that pole which sits in the middle of the room. For our old studio it was fine because the paper was tucked away in a cove where you weren't likely to bump the pole but for this space I wanted it completely secured with nothing touching the ground. -P
@@FStoppers My initial thought was "Why not install just the main rotating piece, and then use a heavy duty stand w wheels on the other side?"
But I didn't factor in you wanting the floorspace clear!!
This is such a great system! I'm working on designing a multi-use space similar in size to this, and will definitely be building something along these lines.
Fun stuff. I love thinking outside the box and being creative outside of photography. BUT I could never desocrate my garage like this :) .. I am a classic car guy too, so my garages are for cars, tools, and hiding from life ;) . My basement is my victimless studio, sewing room, guest room, etc .. Love the video ..
This isn't something that I can use, but DIY props to you!
I just bumped into you channel. DUDE!!! I LOVE IT!!! I have been having this same studio problem. Thank you so much for sharing. I will start my project this coming weekend. Its time to go build something. :)
This was a fantastic video, Patrick. Very innovative thinking and a fantastic result! Bravo!
can't use any of this for my studio - HOWEVER.. love the rube goldberg.. hack it off/bolt it up/ fix with washers mentality...I'll look around your videos.. I'm sure there will be plenty I will use!
If you put that bracket on the other side of the roller cables, you could get an overlap right there no need for a third paper. Basicaly all you did moved 2-3 feet to the right. The down side is that you need to put it right up to the cealing and will probably not clear the light fixtures. It will also be more complicated to change the backdrop. And you don't need a rail, you have a mobile light stand with a special bracket, do you can do any angle you want.
Just use electrical tubing and have it rolled to what ever diameter you need then attach each end and in the middle for extra support and on have a pulley that sits on the tube and then just roll it to any position in the arc. It’s own weight will hold it in position. Use your stick to move it along the track. Should be a cake build. Thanks for the idea.
This is SO much like my space. Great video!
This is awesome! Gives me some great ideas for my garage!
Well when mentioned that you were in a garage and you wanted to move something, my first thought was to use garage door hardware - rails and wheels. But cool that you figured all that out with the hooks and such.
I thought about the garage door hardware but I have no idea how to bend that stuff and when I look at mine closely, it seems to hold the door wheels in the track vertically but if I rotated the track sideways, the track doesn't seem like a very sturdy channel that would hold a trolley in it with weight and play/movement. A unistrut seems like the better material. -P
@@FStoppers yeah , the curve would have been tricky, but the weight would be nothing compared to a garage door. They are really heavy.
I do something almost like this. I use 2 autopoles with the background holders mounted. I can put it up solo in about 5 min and have any radius i want with out drilling into the ceiling of my studio
I created a scrim that hangs for a backdrop for headshots and then I can push it up and lock it with a door latch to bounce light off the ceiling since I have an unfinished basement. I also have it so that I can angle it by just tying it to a desired length.
Oh wow great concept, then again necesity is the mother of invention Thanks for all the great content you guys make on this channel!
Very cool. I'm currently working on a garage studio. Love these ideas.
I watched this Video Clip 3x +, Butt can only like it omce... too Kool n great idea Bra!!!
Very very cool, dude. I have a 2 car garage studio, so got a lot of ideas from this hack alone.
Amazing concept! I'm glad I saw your vid!
You've made my day. Thank you!
nice, creative , out of the box, good job man
that looks like a lot of work before i've finished my coffee. I'm remodeling a garage into a studio so i feel your pain. Since i don't have a roller system i'm just going to use baby pin wall plates and a couple of c-stand grip arms. I have a huge 6x9 window in the garage. I use magnetic plates to mount diffusion or black cloth over the window. Denny's mfgr sells them but i homebrewed one for cheaper. the punching bag swivel is very clever.
I love the gear hack. I've also done a lot of work with 80/20 extruded aluminum and you can do some pretty creative things with it when you think out of the box. I'm mouning the same backdrop supports in my apartment and I was on the fence about getting the aluminum tubes for my savage paper, but you've talked me into it. With the aluminum rods, do you ever see sagging over time with the 7 foot rolls?
Cool. I would have faced the bracket openings, like a mirror image, towards each other making it even easier to move from one to the other.
As a lazy person with a small studio space this made me happy 😅🤷🏽♂️🙌🏽
Absolutely genius!!! 💯
Love those hacks!!! You're creative one son of a gun. TY.
i did a similar thing with curtains.. built a flexible arm out of wood and a curtain pole holds the curtain that is
hangeable at some major points as support ;)
I'd use a light stand pole to hold up the movable end of the roll. Then you could adjust to whatever angle you want
Awesome build 📸
I would look at curtain tracks that they use in hospitals for that track you talked about. I use to do maintenance on them and thought that would be perfect but like you said its just finding the perfect one
I thought about those but the issue is, one of those nylon hangers would have to hold the entire weight of the roller (maybe it's 50% of the total weight). In the hospital, the entire curtain is supported by about 8-20 of those hangers but without hanging it like a curtain, and still maintaining the ability to roll it up, I don't feel confident that one of those systems would be strong enough instill confidence. -P
@@FStoppers totally understandable. Great job creating this thing though. Keep creating. I love your channel
This is fantastic. Great concept!
Genius! Thank you so much for sharing.
I think I might have come up with a solution that would not need you to take it down. By placing 1 unistrut from your 2 end points without a curve. Using a roller to get your outside peace of rail to move along that track. At your old fixed point, place another place on unistrut at a 90 degree angle from your 10 foot rail with another roller supporting your fixed point. This side only needs to be able 2.5 foot. This should give enuff flexibility in the tracks to let it all move from one end to the other end without running out of slack. I don't know if it will work in this location tho.
It's a lot harder to explain without a picture of the diagram.
Ha yeah I don't totally know what you are suggesting. I'd love just a 7 foot piece of perfectly shaped unistrut. That would be perfect! -P
Thank you for this I love innovation...
I struggled with drilling into concrete with a battery drill, even though the bits were good quality and new. I then tried a corded SDS masonry drill using the same bits and job was done very quickly.
It's funny, I had a strong corded hammer drill and it didn't work nearly as well as my battery powered drill. I do have a SDS drill now but I haven't opened it yet. I've found the smaller drill so easy to use that I've just stuck with that one. -P
To move the back drop you could also use one of those clothing hooks that retail workers use to get the clothing off the high racks.
Maybe but why use that when I have the perfect tool made for the stand? -P
@@FStoppers Just in case you were already using the stand. So for anyone who may not have an extra stand laying about or who may want a dedicated tool just for that purpose.
I love seeing how creative and capable people prove themselves to be when there's no immediate aileron available!
I think you hit the whole solution on the head when you realised how to negate the need for the step ladder: just use tripod stands and forget having to screw into the ceiling.
That said, if you don't have any issues with screwing into the ceiling, your solution is much faster for tidying everything away 😁😁
My only Dad Talk here is... please, for next time, some safety goggles and gloves 😉👍
Thanks for the comment. Safety goggles for sure...but are you supposed to use gloves when using power tools like circular saws and grinders? -P
I say patent a design for this kind of need when you can 🙌
I still remember many years ago when you wanted a Pocketwizard radio trigger and you made a drawing of trigger that was in a dual hotshoe with both connected to one another to get the function you wanted. Dunno if you remember Patrick 😅
Ha yeah I remember that design and I actually found a dual hotshoe just for that design. I've patented before (Flash Disc) and it was such a pain in the ass, cost a ton of money, and then China still just rips you off with no easy repercussions. Not sure I want to own another patent any time soon but I'm happy if someone just takes this idea and makes it accessible to the masses. -P
I built a system that swings three non paper backdrops 90 degrees so I can get to the one behind it when needed. Pretty easy set up... I own a pool service so I use old adjustable pool poles that go from 8 to about 15 1/5 ft and plenty strong as I only go to 10 ft max... I can have a back drop on the back of each so can have 6 that move and 2 mounted on the walls so with 2 walls and 3 poles I can have quick access to 8 backdrops ,,, fun to design and build ... your idea is cool too of course and more heavy duty ..(I was just in PR last week doing a few shoots)
Interesting...I would love to see a photo or video of this setup. -P
@@FStoppers Not sure how to get you a photo
Cool! Now all we need is an update on the Charleston studio. 😉
Ah dang it, yes, I have all those video files here in Puerto Rico so I can now get back to editing those....that was def a much bigger studio renovation. I feel like I've built out 5 studios in the last 3 years. -P
@@FStoppers I can’t wait to see it. Happy editing!
brilliant! it all turned out well 💪🏼💪🏼🧠
would love to see how you put up the 2nd background to a seamless corner/cove :D
Hope to have everything to do that tomorrow and will film a video about it soon. -P
Nice job! You can see the ah ha moment at the end with the light stand 😂
Concrete is not fun but it doesn't make noise when your A/C unit shakes due to a bad motor/rotor, then you see nails popping out the wooden wall.... Plus no worries of Tornado damage. Also good for Hurricanes... all you need is the corrugated metal sheets to cover your windows which you can easily put and remove after the storm passes. I miss my concrete home.
Simply a genius. brilliant ideas. thank you sharing with us.💥💥💥,
Can we use 2 in. x 10 ft. PVC Pipe Solid for $17 instead of the Fotoconic 10 Ft / 3M Metal Tube Crossbar for $49?
Made me think of those floor rug display racks that carry heavy area size rugs
Great hack! Looking forward to seeing it completed.
Well I guess the light stand and u hook could just be used to replace the ceiling mounts? Really cool idea, on how you adapt and MacGyver photography things. I appreciate these kinds of videos.
Not sure I follow. The J hooks hold the roll in. The U hook I used at the end would be upside down in the ceiling and wouldn't hold anything. You can of course use Light Stands but I didn't want clucky stands with large footprints in the middle of my studio space. -P
Hey Patrick .I too have a garage photo studio ( 3 car ) but that doesn’t matter . I called a garage door company and they removed the center automatic door opener and mounted motor’ on the wall next to the doors to open and close door . Which results in removing that obstacle out of the way for a overhead lighting set up . I’d send you pictures of before and after but don’t have a link to email them to you .
I don’t want to post them on my social media pages as I’m trying to improve those to be 100 % professional .
Jonathon Paape
That's an interesting idea. I just completely turned off my garage circuit breaker and don't expect to open my garage any time soon. With hurricane season, I'm actually probably going to reinforce it shut even more. -P
This is really nice - Oh that mother of invention - necessity.
Great video and great idea 💡 👍
Cool idea, but why not use c-stands with caster wheels on the end that's moving?
Any rolling vertical stabe pole system unit on the end of rolling backdrop, with nice large caster wheels, could do it. Peter Coulson (UA-cam) has every connected with caster wheels on his backdrops in his studio.
I just don't like the idea of a huge footprint in the middle of my space. Wheels could make it stable enough that if someone bumped into it, the system would just roll but I still don't want anything sticking out. Peter's studio is like an airplane hanger! -P
Nice job!
Instead of depending on something out at the tip. Make a heavier duty swivel at the wall so you can just swing it. That's how I would do it personally. Then you can make a drop down handle attached to it at the wall so you can swing it from the floor.
Not sure I"m understanding this idea. Would love to see a photo of it. -P
this is brilliant
What if you use that very tripod to pan your back drop while on the floor? You can then position it any where within the length of the backdrop holder.
Really cool project. I’m curious though, if the light stand is long enough, can you just keep the roller on the light stand also and roll it up and down without the other hook?
Yeah def I just didn't want a lightstand in the middle of the room with bulky legs sticking out. I also have those varipoles that have very low profile but if you happened to knock into one, the whole thing is falling down. -P
@@FStoppers I know what you mean. I have the standard three paper role holder in my small studio and it is super not to have to fiddle with nightstands. Still the flexibility to have any angle you want by just extending a light stand without the hassle of setting everything up (since it is all already hanging at the ceiling) is a plus.
BTW, a layout of the studio to show what angles you are considering shooting from would have helped understand what you needed to achieve.
Cool video!
an idea for a made up rail system could be with a straigh rail perpendicular and a longer pole that can take the extra length, it would only work for less than a 90 degre range and practical for around 45 degrees range
Fantastic 👌
great idea man!
Time for you to get into product development. I smell a kickstarter coming!
Instead of the pole to unhook and rehook the backdrop, attach it to the backdrop with a caster ball on the bottom that rolls on the floor. Then you have your track system idea with infinite adjustability
I don't want anything touching my floor at all though. I don't want the trip hazard, and when I roll the backdrop up, I don't want a stand there that is need to keep it tucked away. -P
Great video. It looks like you need to cover the camera's preview display so you don't keep looking at it. ;)
What about a curved curtain in the corner? Would that look really bad or a way to add depth in a small studio? 💡 idea gathering for my tiny space. Thanks
Wow thats really cool how that works 🤔 might implement this myself
Instead of the washers to fill the space just get a piece of nylon bushing. It's a tubular shape that will fit over the pin, and you can cut it to the exact length you need.
Great ingenuity
Home Depot sells conduit that those background paper holders fit in. They come in 10' lengths, are steel and don't sag.
I think I've tried fitting the plastic holders in these pipes but the pipes were too small inside. They might fit in the paper ream but the other hardware won't fit inside them. Maybe there is another option? -P
@@FStoppers I bought a pipe size large enough for the expan units to fit inside. I think they were around 2" inside diameter. There are also metal corners made for building frames for plastic covered tents, greenhouses, etc that are inexpensive and are designed for the smaller electrical conduit. Use them to make an overhead frame for your white diffuser silks. The Hollywood ears hold the frame to your c-stand knuckles.
Hi how are you? Great video, question how do you glue the cardboard tube of the paper to the aluminum tube? Thank you in advance
You don't glue it. I actually use that rubber material you use to keep stuff from sliding in a motor home or maybe in your silverware drawer. Wrap a little of that on both ends and slide the tube through it tight. It grips it perfectly without it being completely permanent. -P
@@FStoppers thank you! I will try
great! Thx for the inspiration 🥳
Great video, this is the kind of content that I want to make.
Awesome!!
great idea
really cool hack
Great vid!!
Nice video… OR you can you the light stand as your support and use the backdrop anywhere :) ?
I'm going to have to address comments like these in the next video. If you use a lightstand, when you roll the backdrop up and out of the way, the stand is still in the middle of your room! -P
This is actually a very bright solution for studios of all sizes! 😮👌
Move over, mother-in-law.
I'm reclaiming your bedroom as my studio! 😆🤭
Brilliant.
I’m not all the way through the video yet, but it sounds like you’re describing those hanging rug displays that move side to side like at TJ Maxx? Curious if I’m on the right track.. Or if not, if that might work.
Yeah that is a similar design. The issue is you need the arm that holds the rug to also be able to support the paper and allow it to roll down. -P
Very creative
Instead of having only two hooks for positions, keep that stand adapters on a tall stand and keep the roll on it. You can then walk to any position that you want.