Canalligators Lone Wolf and Santa Fe Ask your wife or girlfriend Or ask a male who is open minded enough to have fabric skills in his toolbox. They're useful skills, guys. BTW, my daughter does her own home electrical work, and my son makes a mean pizza.
Lone Wolf and Santa Fe Ask your wife or girlfriend
Or ask a male who is open minded enough to have fabric skills in his toolbox. They're useful skills, guys. BTW, my daughter does her own home electrical work, and my son makes a mean pizza.
Yes they can be very useful. I don’t make my own clothes but I do use cloth material to cover studio equipment that I make myself. Sometimes I use “speaker carpet”. I also upholstery the furniture that I build and car seats. Speaker carpet is similar to pool table felt but it might be tougher and slightly more fuzzy. It is usually a dark shade of gray.
http://www.matchaknob.com/sound_felt/grey_speaker_carpet_4_x_15/
The outdoor carpet mentioned by others is good too. I’ve seen it used on the walls of radio and TV stations and low end recording studios to absorb sound.
P.S. My dad is a gourmet chef.
Lone Wolf and Santa FeAsk your wife or girlfriend
Genesee Terminal, freelanced HO in Upstate NY ...hosting Loon Bay Transit Authority and CSX Intermodal. Interchange with CSX (CR)(NYC).
CP/D&H, N scale, somewhere on the Canadian Shield
gmpullman Nevin Now I have two further questions: what did you use to attach the material to the fascia Click on the bottom photo in my post. When you get to Flickr click on the photo again to enlarge it. You can see an open can of Roberts 6700 Indoor/Outdoor adhesive and you can see it being applied to the fascia with a notched trowel. Just my opinion, I think the tan would work nicely. Ed
Nevin Now I have two further questions: what did you use to attach the material to the fascia
Click on the bottom photo in my post. When you get to Flickr click on the photo again to enlarge it. You can see an open can of Roberts 6700 Indoor/Outdoor adhesive and you can see it being applied to the fascia with a notched trowel.
Just my opinion, I think the tan would work nicely.
Ed
Thanks. I think I will head back to Home Depot with the photo from the website in hand. It may be that it isn't carried by all HD's in Las Vegas.
NevinNow I have two further questions: what did you use to attach the material to the fascia
Hi, Nevin
I have re-covered several billiard/pool tables and I'm not familiar with "underlayment". I used billiard cloth and most of what I bought then was quite expensive, in the neighborhood of $100 for a 108" x 61" piece. And that was the "economy" stuff!
My fascia covering is a latex-backed fabric that looks a bit like corduroy and it is light weight and durable and relatively inexpensive.
http://www.homedepot.com/p/TrafficMASTER-Elevations-Color-Sky-Grey-Ribbed-Indoor-Outdoor-12-ft-Carpet-7PD5N660144H/203240740
IMG_8441_fix by Edmund, on Flickr
It can be found in at least four colors, light gray, green, blue and tan/beige.
I even used some to cover the 2 x 4 legs in some areas of my layout.
IMG_8469_fix by Edmund, on Flickr
Home Depot sells it as "Indoor-Outdoor carpeting" but it is much thinner than what I would consider as carpeting.
IMG_8464_fix by Edmund, on Flickr
Above is what the tan color looks like. If you go to the store when they aren't too busy, they will use their cutting machine and cut the material into strips for you. I bought ten, 12" strips which are twelve feet long for under $50. About 41¢ per square foot.
The nice thing about this stuff is that it resists scuffs, if you remove something that was screwed to it, the screw holes practically disappear, and Velcro will stick to it so you can stick throttles and signs to it and remove them later.
IMG_8471_fix by Edmund, on Flickr
My actual fascia is thin plywood paneling. I dislike very much working with the more commonly used "Masonite" tempered hardboard. For me, the plywood cuts much easier and doesn't leave so much powdery dust. In most cases I can cut it with a sharp utility knife.
IMG_8425_fix by Edmund, on Flickr
For what it's worth— Home Depot DOES have billiard cloth:
http://www.homedepot.com/p/Championship-8-ft-Burgundy-Saturn-II-Billiards-Cloth-Pool-Table-Felt-BG263BR/204618879
Good Luck, Ed
Those are hardware stores. You need to try a cloth store.
Ask your wife or girlfriend.
Try something like this felt at Joann's (formerly Cloth World)
http://www.joann.com/search?q=pool+table
In this month's MR, the article about the Hoosac Valley discussed using pool table underlayment as a nice clean material to cover the front fascia of a model railroad. It looked like something I could use. However, I've not been able to find anyone in Las Vegas or on the internet for that matter that sells it. Any thoughts? Does it go by other names? Any other suggestions? HD and Lowes doesn't sell anything that even looks like it.