furnone
Bronze Member
Carpet tack strips?
Some back of the envelope numbers on a simple pegboard vacuum system:
The suction of Shop-vac's is rated in inches of water lift, quick Googling tells me that a 16-gallon has 52 inches of lift, which is equivalent to 1.9 PSI. So if you had an opening of 10 square inches that would be 19 pounds of force. That would be horizontal force, the amount of vertical force would be determined by the amount of friction, but intuitively it seems that the vertical force would be at least equal to the horizontal force, so you could hold 19 pounds of material. A higher friction surface would be helpful -- like the rough side of pegboard.
Box-store pegboard has 9/32" holes on 1" centers. The area of a 9/32" hole is just about exactly 1/16 square inches, so 10 square inches of opening is 160 square inches of pegboard -- or a 16X10 area. So far, so good.
Looking at it the other way, if you had a 6x6 foot quilt that weighed 20 pounds, how much suction would you need? A 6x6 foot square is 5184 square inches, pegboard of that size has 324 square inches of opening. To generate 20 pounds of force only requires 0.06 PSI of vacuum, or 1.7 inches of water lift. That doesn't sound that bad either.
I think you're going to find that the key is controlling air leakage, the less flow the higher the suction. You might run into a problem that the quilt is too permeable to form a good seal. You also need to cover the parts of the table that aren't covered by the quilt. My thought is to use pieces of Tyvek, which will seal and should provide a background that is unobjectionable for photos.
I think the handling would be easiest if the table had a way of pivoting, so you can lay everything out flat, then turn on the vacuum and flip the table vertical for the shoot.
A 4x8 sheet of pegboard is about $15, it seems like you could experiment and get an idea of whether it's going to work rather cheaply.
From a business perspective the nice thing about solving hard problems is that they're hard, you can charge a premium for solving them.
Have you tried magnets?
Actually looks like a good excuse to build a pole barn with 18' ceiling.
Off the wall idea (no pun intended)...
If a big enough mirror (8'x10') was available...could a good enough photo be captured from a reflection?
Don't hang the subject, hang the photographer.
Rig a 20' jib pole on your front loader, get into a boatswain's chair, lay the quilt flat on the ground and hang over it to take your pictures. The jib pole would also be handy for pruning the upper branches of trees, cleaning 2nd floor gutters, etc.