Robert Schaubhut
Member
- Messages
- 2,323
- Location
- Houston, Texas
As of late, more of my clients with full blown entertainment centers are choosing to see the screen of the tv rather than hide it behind doors. This offers us the opportunity to get "jiggy" with the situation. They, the clients, are asking for a frame to cover most of the tv except for the image.
With the changing of tv's occuring as often as it does for the wealthy, some want to be prepared for an upgrade and physical size change which is inevitible. The "framing" in of the tv offers some flexibility for the tv cavity with out the obvious glaring irregularities that occur with a tv model change. We do however need to be accurate and creative with our solutions. Thus the problem I had to deal with. It was a tv that stuck out like a girl in a pink dress at a funeral. Fortunately they didn't like it and so the plot thickens.
With the changing of tv's occuring as often as it does for the wealthy, some want to be prepared for an upgrade and physical size change which is inevitible. The "framing" in of the tv offers some flexibility for the tv cavity with out the obvious glaring irregularities that occur with a tv model change. We do however need to be accurate and creative with our solutions. Thus the problem I had to deal with. It was a tv that stuck out like a girl in a pink dress at a funeral. Fortunately they didn't like it and so the plot thickens.