Canvas Types Compared: Tripod, Motorized, or Fixed Frame?

By Felix Brandner 5 min read

Which projection screen is right for you? You've decided on a beamer – awesome! Now you need the right screen. But which type? Tripod…

In 2 Minutes

  • Tripod: Flexible, portable, €50–150 — ideal for garden, apartment, and rental spaces.
  • Motorized roller: Disappears into ceiling or bracket after movie — perfect for living room, €150–500.
  • Frame screen: Best image quality through constant tension, permanently installed, €250–800.
  • Gain value 1.0–1.3 & matte white: This covers 95% of home cinema users — exotic materials only for special cases.

You've got your projector — now you're facing three different screen types with prices ranging from €50 to €800. Which one fits your living room? In 6 minutes you'll know when each model makes sense and what to look for when buying.

The three screen types at a glance

There are infinite variations on the market, but only three basic types — everything else is a hybrid:

Type Price Ideal for
Tripod €50–150 Flexible, garden, rental apartment
Motorized/manual roller €150–500 Living room with multipurpose use
Frame €250–800 Dedicated home cinema

Tripod screen: The flexible all-rounder

The cheapest option — and underrated. A good tripod screen costs €80–120 and delivers impressive image quality for the money. Advantage: You set it up in 2 minutes, take it to the garden, or fold it away right after the movie.

What it can't do: maintain permanent, perfect tension. After a few weeks you'll see fine ripples, which you'll amplify even more when moving the screen.

Suitable for: Casual users, renters, outdoor fans, flexible folks.

Roller screen: The living room all-rounder

The most common choice for living rooms — and for good reason. After the movie it retracts and your living room is a living room again. Two variants:

  • Manual: Pull cord, mechanical retraction. €100–200.
  • Motorized: Remote control or smart home integration. €250–500.

Quality tip: Look for a frame construction with side tension (tab-tensioned). Without this, the fabric will sag slightly over time — then blurriness and distortion are inevitable.

Tech tip

Tab-tensioned systems pull the fabric sideways with fine wires. This prevents the typical pillow bulge over time. The price difference from a standard roller is about €80–120 — and pays off with regular use. Important: Extend the motor regularly, otherwise the fabric can kink at the top edge.

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Frame screen: The cinema experience

Permanently installed, always perfectly tensioned, no ripple issues — the frame screen is the benchmark for image quality. Downsides: You lose wall space permanently and have no flexibility.

  • Black velvet frame: Significantly increases perceived contrast.
  • One-piece fabric: No visible seams, uniform reflection.
  • Fixed installation: Permanent, nothing shifts.

Makes sense if you have a dedicated home cinema room or watch multiple times per week.

The material: Gain value and color

Every screen is made from special fabric with a specified gain value — the reflection factor:

  • Gain 1.0 (matte white): Reflects light evenly in all directions. Standard for 90% of home cinemas.
  • Gain 1.2–1.4: Brighter, but smaller "sweet spot" for viewing angle. For low-light projectors.
  • ALR (Ambient Light Rejection): Reflects only projector light, blocks ambient light from the sides. €300–800.
  • Gray fabric: Improves black levels in darkened rooms, costs some brightness.

Which size fits?

Rule of thumb: viewing distance = 1.5 to 2.5 times the screen diagonal. At 2.5 m viewing distance, 80–100 inches works perfectly. Details in our screen size calculator.

Summary: Your next step

Flexible and budget-friendly? Tripod. Living room with multipurpose use? Roller with tab-tensioned technology. Dedicated home cinema? Frame screen. For 90% of households, the roller screen is the best compromise — solid image quality with full room flexibility.

The PIXORA One from €99.99 with 180° projection delivers its strengths on any screen — from tripod in the garden to frame in your cinema room. For larger image sizes, the PIXORA Max offers the right brightness budget.

We've installed and tested all three screen types ourselves for months. You'll find our complete projector selection in our projector collection.

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Frequently asked questions about screen types

Which type is most flexible for beginners?

The tripod screen. It sets up freestanding in any room, is height-adjustable, and folds away after your movie night. No drilling, no permanent installation.

Is a frame screen worth it in the living room?

Only if you can reserve a permanent space. Frame screens deliver the most uniform image surface but hang permanently on the wall. In a multi-purpose living room, often too dominant.

What's the difference between milk-silk and matte white?

Milk-silk is a slightly glossy textile with high whiteness and very uniform reflection — optimal for dark rooms and LED projectors. Pure matte white is cheaper but can look less uniform with shallow projection angles.

How large should my first screen be?

Rule of thumb: viewing distance in meters × 30 = sensible diagonal in inches. At 3 m distance, roughly 90 inches; at 4 m, roughly 120 inches. Our models cover 100 and 120 inches — both standard sizes.

Can I use fabric or a white bed sheet instead of a screen?

Temporarily yes, but fabric throws wrinkles and reflects unevenly. For permanent use, upgrading to real projection surfaces is worth it — the difference is visible to the naked eye immediately.

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