"My director wants painted drops.
Any advice?"
Let's start with the fabric. When painting a drop, it is easier to work on NFR (NON Flame Retardant) muslin. The FR muslin has a coating and the funny "hand" to the fabric makes it not take paint as well.
Painted drops can be seamed (always cheaper) unless you plan to make a translucency to light from behind.
The drop should be stretched and stapled down when it is painted. In a space with a paint frame, the drop can be hung vertically. Otherwise you will need to roll out a plastic drop cloth. Cover the plastic with bogus paper and then staple the drop to the floor. Remember to use extra long staples and to not drive the staples all the way in. After all, you do have to remove the drop later.
![]() In case you have "forgotten," here is the math for determining a right angle. (Tip: use 3,4,5 or 30,40,50...) |
The drop should remain in place until you are finished and the paint is completely dry. Fans may be used to help dry the paint more quickly.
If the picture is of an architectural element, you will need to square the drop and snap a base line as a reference point. Once the drop is attached to the frame or secured to the floor, use two long tape measures and carpenters square to mark a right angle on one side. Use the snapped base line on the bottom of the drop as a given. Place one tape measure on the vertical edge and let one serve as the hypotenuse of the triangle.
![]() Use a "grid" to facilitate accurate transfer from rendering to drop. |
When the tape measures are lined up to give the correct measure for the vertical and hypotenuse, snap the vertical line so you can mark an accurate grid.
Before you can paint your actual backdrop image, you must "size" the fabric - a process which seals the fibers. (A translucency requires starching rather than sizing.) For a typical opaque drop there are several choices for sizing - many scene shops use flame retardant.
For the novice painter, I recommend sizing the drop with very thin (ie watered down) white scenic paint with Flamex P-50 mixed in. This offers a size coat and a priming coat together in the same step. Do not use house paint for this! [more information on flame retardants] I recommend thinning white scene paint to the consistency of skim milk for the size coat.
In the past, many scene painters used "size water" made of glue and water to size drops. The general test was you put your thumb and forefinger in the size water and waited 30 seconds. If it was hard to get your fingers apart - too much glue. If there wasn't a "pop" when you parted your digits there wasn't enough glue in the mixture. You should use a flexible glue like Flexbond. Carpenters glue or other polyvinyls may dry yellow or white or come up through the layers of paint.
Once your drop is sized, treated with flame retardant and primed, you're ready to paint your "scene." Keep in mind that when painting a drop you want the paint as thin as possible so it does not build up thick layers of paint resulting in cracks later. The trick is to achieve an appropriate balance that leaves enough "glue" in the thinned paint for it to stick to the surface. This balance is readily achieved with specifically formulated scene paint.
Wal-Mart and Home Depot - although great places to find a "bargain" - are not your friend when it comes to scene painting.
Things to keep in mind when working with dark & middle tones include:
When working with white and light tones, keep in mind:
![]() 4" Chip Brush |
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