This is a long thread and you will see the art paint and telescope flocking come up every dozen pages or so, and get redirected back to velvet. Specialty materials for a lab, blackroom (photography), telescope and camera interiors, or art installations won't stand up to dust, fingerprints, airborne fibers, etc. These other solutions are just not made for environments with people in them. PixelPushers answer applies to these solutions as well, really. There was also a primer option but it may fall in the not-user-friendly category for obvious reasons. a quick search brought up Rosco Velour Flat Black - but I also recall someone adding a matte poly or something to the Video Paint to make it more user friendly. You'll have to read for yourself to find the winner. I think "Rosco Video Paint TV Black" might be the leading performance but it has the same user-compatibility issues of the art paints and specialty surfaces. If you need actual black paint there are several recommended options in the thread - I think the all the leading ones are Rosco branded paints. They are also acrylic and not made for walls. These art paints look black when directly lit, as compared to their lighter surroundings, but in near dark environments like a theater they are not performing as well as fabric for stray light bouncing around. If you need acoustically transparent, Whaley's is the best option. You may want the premium for screen frame only, or screen wall at most. There are a few grades of it available, with prices going up drastically for minimal improvement. The thread has all the facts already - If you want black, use velvet. Flocking cannot be cleaned - you will just remove the fine fibers that are glued on, not woven in. Click to expand.PixelPushers answer applies to these solutions as well, really.
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