Big Screen. Among the various office layouts, the projection screen holds a central place: it accompanies meetings and conferences and allows the projection of images or graphics, in order to give more impact to the speech. More than just a projection medium, it now fits into the décor and has been designed to be as practical as it is aesthetic. You'll find wall screens like Manutan's, but also lightweight tripod-mounted screens, which can move from room to room as needed. For small group conferences or for mobile users, table screens are small in size and have fold-down feet and handles ...
... to be easily transportable. The larger models of wall screens are motorized, while others are integrated into console or triptych sets. Triptych Screens are in the amenities category on Defafinder. These modular projection screens from the Italian house Cyrus Company can fit into niches or panelling, create a modeate and make architecture. The most innovative examples are those of the French brand Design Screen which open in three parts in the manner of triptychs. All the user has to do is open the right and then the left pane so that the screen automatically stretches out through a patented mechanism that causes no creases on the canvas: because it is the canvas that bends in the device away from the hinges. In this way, the large screen takes up three times less space and fully integrates with the decoration: it regains the dimensions of the bridge painting. Decorative table-The projection screens of the new generation are therefore hidden behind aluminum or wooden panels with a coaster where the poster or image of one's choice will be inserted, portraits, contemporary photographs, landscapes or city views. Some models even offer a bare frame on which a real painted canvas can be stretched. In the company and at home, we have gone from the large white screen that was concealed through a winding system, to frames that recall the painting, its format, its images and even its textures. Way to assert, in the face of a cold standardization of office furniture, the powers of the image, the strong and sensitive presence of the painting in a high tech world.
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