






🎥 Elevate Your Viewing Experience!
The High Gain 120 Inch Projector Screen by SilverMagic offers a remarkable 2.6x brightness gain and 30% ambient light rejection, ensuring stunning image quality in any lighting condition. With a sleek design that mimics a fixed-frame screen and an easy installation process, this projector screen is perfect for both home theaters and professional presentations.





A**Y
Easy to Assemble
Great size and easy to assemble. I had purchased one of SilverMagic's older models that used a Velcro system to mount onto the wall. This new method of tacking it to the wall felt much easier and faster. I think the Velcro one took a couple of hours and this one was done in less than half the time. Adjustments are super easy too. Overall reflectiveness is great. For the white screen, I would still recommend having a dark room and mainly using it in the evenings. The amount of visibility during the day time for cartoons or anime though was surprisingly good.
M**B
End result is very good for the price but requires patience.
First things first.. This is not a quick job, nor is it for a novice in my option. I have experience owning and putting together a few different fixed frame screens. For the best outcome you really need to build a basic frame, which I did. Especially if you're putting it up yourself. Between building the frame, getting wall hangers up, laying out the screen and tediously adding the velcro all around the frame, stretching and getting the screen attached and trying to keep wrinkles out, adding the felt border, re-stretching, trimming the excess around the edges and hanging the whole thing the again working more wrinkles out of the edges,.. yeah it takes the better part of the day. Does all of that sound fun!? Well, for some people probably but if you dont have lots of patience, this is not the screen for you. The extra effort building a frame just making it look way better, it also makes putting it up on the wall, level, way more doable. Because you do 95% of it on the floor and it's super light weight, actually hanging it up on the wall is the easiest part vs the most difficult without a frame. Very tedious assembly is why I only gave this 4 stars. Now on to the screen itself..In one word, unique. I got the white 100". It is not like the cheap super stretchy fabric ones with the eyelits around the border nor is it PVC like more expensive screens. It's a fairly sheer tightly woven semi-shinny fabric with very minimal transparency. It feels delicate but really isn't. It's extremely thin and light weight but slightly stretchy. Totally unique fabric I've never seen anything like it. It's pretty easy to work with as you have to stretch it several times over the course of the process. The end results are pretty darn impressive. I went from an older, yet pretty nice 100" PVC screen to this one and it is noticeably brighter. I'd say their claims are pretty spot on. Contrast is marginally better but again, I do see the difference. I use a 1000 ANSI lumens LG LED projector. With a large window about 25ft directors opposite of the screen and my overhead lighting at around 25%, this is equally as bright as my old screen with the lights off and curtains closed. Impressive stuff.One thing of note pertaining to the frame. Because of the size you'll want to put a vertical center beam in to keep it from sagging and keep it square. The issue with that is because the screen is slightly transparent, you can see the silhouette of it in darker scenes like in movies. To fix this, make sure it's thinner wood. When building your frame, use some little flat metal brackets to affix the center support. Screw the brackets to the back center of the top and bottom beams and then add the center support beam screwing it to the other end of the brackets right down the middle. This will hold that thinner center support toward the back of the frame but still flush on the back side. It will no longer press against the back side of the screen and you won't see it. You could also paint the center support white which greatly reduces seing it because white reflects direct light instead of absorbing it like the pine wood color.Between the cost of the screen and the frame and hardware, you're in for about $70-$80. Not to shabby if you have the tools and don't mind a project. I'll add some pics to this review. Hope this helps answer some questions.
J**F
Works exactly like it's supposed to!!
For the price of this versus other "ALR" options Such as the cinegrey line etc... It just made sense to try. If not you can rip it up and make a few "high-viz" shirts to hand out for the holidays.. anyway just know what you're buying and you'll probably be impressed. As long as your HEAD is super close to the light source (generally not possible for overhead installations... Not whonthis product is for) in my case I have a Wimius 700 lumen led projector that sits about a foot or so above my head. For this use it's perfect because this material really seems to want to reflect light directly back at it's source(this feature is why light from the sides or ceiling will be lessened. BUT if you have any light directly behind you or really between you and the screen... It's going to wash out the colors real quick!!! HOWEVER if you're that customer who just wants to get a lil more oomph out of their budget projector and you're sitting within about a 30 degree cone of dead center? You're gonna have a great time! The last picture is with windows open letting in lots of indirect light from the side. I did wind up building a frame for the screen and honestly this screen material reflects back enough light to actually look like a tv even in a well lit room (again, as long as all light sources are indirect and to the side of the screen...) I can't say enough about this screen!!!!
C**G
run away ! dont even bother !!
dont waste your time !!! i made a fixed frame from 1x4 pine and had white blackout cloth for a screen in a pitch black room with a yaber y31 projector. this thing makes everything unreadable distorted with everything but film . with film it makes the whole screen beyond dark . on top of that the right hand side is all blotched up . blackout cloth was $20 and looks 100000 times better !!!
X**H
See the Difference! {220 Lumen Projector}
The media could not be loaded. Now, me and you both probably have either the Yaber K2S, K3, Nebula Cosmos 4K SE, etc in our carts;But spending $500+ for a brighter, better color and contrast, more usuable projector isn't always in the immediate interests of the typical consumer.By golly we got one with this! Not only do I have the ability to keep my computer screens on while using the projector (connected to PC), but the amazing pop in contrast and brightness is amazing!This screen was very easy to install, stays flat nicely when clamped at every point available (not literally, but almost), and feels quality, well worth the money paid at the time (01/05/25 - $49.99).Please consider a look through the gallery of images I'm happy to share, not only did my picture quality triple, the color and contrast of the image is notably a feeling I thought I'd get only after spending $500 on the new Yaber K3 that used to be in my cart ...This is easily the best purchase I've made for the movie room, as I totally feel content with the image now, no brighter, lower latency anything, just me and a few movies every now and again :-)As noted:Projector:Vankyo Leisure E30T ($180 - 2023)[1080P]Screens Used:- Silver Magic Screen- Onn 120" White ScreenStudio Monitors:- Behringer Truth 3.5 (Non-Bluetooth)*W/ Dayton Audio ND91-4s
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