I'm thinking this is a cheap way to do this, but why not just stick the material to the wall itself? Also thinking the material wasn't laminated, so no chance for matte laminate, again, budget minded, which is fine, I can appreciate the tips and tricks on cutting corners, as long as it's not compromising the sign as a whole. Being inside a kitchen, it probably won't see much sunlight. I'd personally stick it to the wall with some satin or matte laminate.Why use coroplast for something like this??
It wasn't gloss, it was matte. However, by reducing the surface sheen even further, achieved the required outcome. So, in a pinch, could be done as well if lam was gloss.Why use a gloss laminate then scuff it up to make it matte?
Why use coroplast for something like this??
I'm so confused.
Great responses.I'm thinking this is a cheap way to do this, but why not just stick the material to the wall itself? Also thinking the material wasn't laminated, so no chance for matte laminate, again, budget minded, which is fine, I can appreciate the tips and tricks on cutting corners, as long as it's not compromising the sign as a whole. Being inside a kitchen, it probably won't see much sunlight. I'd personally stick it to the wall with some satin or matte laminate.
You forgot 5) install bewbies in the kitchen that I can quickly remove when the wife realizes god and adam weren't surrounded by that many originally.1) was an experiment. 2) the job didn't merit anything beyond that and would be easily removable. 3) cost effective and on-hand. 4) and best of all, to create confusion
Get over it - it's art.You forgot 5) install bewbies in the kitchen that I can quickly remove when the wife realizes god and adam weren't surrounded by that many originally.
I never said I didn't like it! I'm pretty impressed that they don't stand out as an unoriginal piece of the art.Get over it - it's art.
Sheesh .............................................................