tent-dsguises-msg - 8/16/05 Ideas for disguising modern tents. NOTE: See also the files: tent-alt-msg, decadence-msg, tent-fabrics-msg, tent-sources-msg, pavilions-msg, tent-rental-msg, p-tents-msg. ************************************************************************ NOTICE - This file is a collection of various messages having a common theme that I have collected from my reading of the various computer networks. Some messages date back to 1989, some may be as recent as yesterday. This file is part of a collection of files called Stefan's Florilegium. These files are available on the Internet at: http://www.florilegium.org I have done a limited amount of editing. Messages having to do with separate topics were sometimes split into different files and sometimes extraneous information was removed. For instance, the message IDs were removed to save space and remove clutter. The comments made in these messages are not necessarily my viewpoints. I make no claims as to the accuracy of the information given by the individual authors. Please respect the time and efforts of those who have written these messages. The copyright status of these messages is unclear at this time. If information is published from these messages, please give credit to the originator(s). Thank you, Mark S. Harris AKA: THLord Stefan li Rous Stefan at florilegium.org ************************************************************************ From: arborimg Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: I have a question about tents... Date: Tue, 24 Sep 1996 20:51:25 -0400 Nils K Hammer wrote: > Someone suggested covering nylon dome tents with cloth to > look better, although the shape might be suspect. > > Previous discussion of the subject here included late period > pictures of dome tents, so the shape should not be disagreeable. I did once see a small dome tent completely "thatched" with twigs. Looked great. I also saw a campsite in which a convenient tree with a high limb was used with a rope attatched to the top of a dome tent. During the day, the tent was hoisted up and out of sight. Gunnbjorn Gunnarsson From: parkerd at mcmail.cis.McMaster.CA (Diana Parker) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Hiding a mundane tent Date: 2 Mar 1997 17:09:12 -0500 Organization: McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. Womyn2me wrote: >how do I hide my very nice mundane tent?? Here's a few suggestions, feel free to pick & choose: - make a number of pennons or dags to string on a rope & encircle the roof line - do you have outside poles? Make decorative hangings to slip over those poles as you put up the tent. - spike poles that stick up through the canvas? make toppers for them. - make a pair of banners to hang from each side of your awning. - place a rug & nice pair of chairs & a table with cloth under your awning. - go for ambience inside, starting with a rug or carpet on the floor - don't worry about your tent, enjoy your first event & decide later if you want to commit to a period tent if and as this one wears out. cheers Tabitha -- Diana Parker parkerd at mcmaster.ca (905) 525-9140 (x24282) CUC - 201 Security Services McMaster University From: lshumar at iquest.net (Laura Shumar) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Hiding a mundane tent Date: 3 Mar 1997 03:32:10 GMT I'm not sure if a mundane tent can be effectively hidden...if I had the equipment/space/ability to build a tent cozy, I'd use it to build a real period tent. If you're camping in a very small pup tent, then it might be possible to stretch a cheap fabric structure over it, but I wouldn't try it for anything large. What I do is try to make other things more noticable than my mundane tent. I bought one of those sunshades with a frame made of tubes; and I'm planning to make a fabric cover to replace the striped vinyl one, or maybe even to go over it. This will be easier than a tent, I think - it's only nice, not necessary, for it to be waterproof and structurally sound. Try nice, eye-catching banners and such too. It's a lot easier to overlook the mundane stuff if there's some really intersting period stuff to draw your attention :-) -Laura From: wmdcarr at aol.com (WMDCARR) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Hiding a mundane tent Date: 3 Mar 1997 08:51:40 GMT Womyn2me (womyn2me at aol.com) wrote: : I will be making my first trip to an SCA event this spring...I do a lot of : camping mundanely and am not so committed yet to the SCA that I wish to : spend money on a period tent or pavilion...so how do I hide my very nice : mundane tent?? And Tangwystyl sagely replied, in part: < So, in summary, save your ingenuity and energy for the possible day when you take fabric and thread in hand and decide you want a medieval-style tent. In the mean time, don't worry too much about it. Tangwystyl verch Morgant Glasvryn>> To these wise words I would add that a good modern tent is designed with the tent and rainfly acting as a unit. Adding a "tent-cozy" is likely to at best make it unbearably hot in warm weather, and at worse may result in excessive internal condensation. I suppose with a cheap cabin tent from K-Mart it probably doesn't make much difference, but after paying some $300 for a one person backpacking tent (two if they are very friendly) I should at least be able to get some snob value out of it! In terra pax, Rouland Carr From: sthomas728 at aol.com (SThomas728) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Hiding a mundane tent Date: 3 Mar 1997 08:51:57 GMT I very much agree with the Lady Tangwystyl on her accounts that covering may cause attention more than hide (think of teenagers trying to cover acne with heavy make-up and instead making the situation worse! :) However, if you are set on hiding your tent, I have a solution that is fairly cheap. Many Fred Meyers or "department stores" have a camping aisle in which they carry "shades". They are basically four poles and a roof with a thin fabric covering the roof and sometimes down each leg. I have found them as cheap as $25 for a 10x10', but more sturdy ones can run to $70 (still at LEAST 1/10th the cost of a bought pavilion so far). Attach to this four walls of either canvas or another natural looking fabric (basically curtains) and inside this place your mundane tent. It need not be waterproof (although I suggest water/mildew resisting the added fabric so it is easier to maintain) since you ar sleeping inside a waterproof mundane tent anyway. I've found this method also tends to cut back on rain and wind somewhat, and as it has shading properties, will cut back on the "oven factor" in the middle of a hot day which tends to occur with modern tents. If your tent does not fit inside one 10x10', you may choose to buy two (with straight walls so they can be pushed together). Also, sometimes Costco and other warehouse stores carry a sort of pavilion without walls (the roof tends to be waterproofed and is often intended for sales booths at fairs) which comes in a 10x20' size for about $150. They are freestanding and very sturdy. I hope this helps! Wither option is still amazingly cheaper than a pavilion itself, and it should do the trick! If I can be of any more help, feel free to e-mail me. Sincerely, Genevieve From: sunrise686 at aol.com (Sunrise686) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Hiding a mundane tent Date: 3 Mar 1997 09:23:40 GMT I heard that people have been using those India bedspreads to cover their mundane tents, and although it isn't period, it "looks" period. They would also be light weight. Eleanor Courtenay From: gileshill at aol.com (Gileshill) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Hiding a mundane tent Date: 3 Mar 1997 09:43:21 GMT Laura Ite Ghorm said: >I will be making my first trip to an SCA event this spring...I do a lot of >camping mundanely and am not so committed yet to the SCA that I wish to >spend money on a period tent or pavilion...so how do I hide my very nice >mundane tent?? Laura, assuming that a) you don't want to make any structural alterations to your very nice (read: expensive) modern tent and b) that it isn't over six feet tall, I'd recommend acquiring some portable holes* and making a fabric screen to surround your tent. You can use patterned material, or paint your heraldry on it, or just leave it natural. If you're likely to encounter high winds, consider cutting windflaps into the cloth, to lessen the wind resistance. Giles *That may be local idiom; I mean 'pole holders you can pound into the ground, useful for holding poles for banners, lanterns, pavillions, list ropes, and so on, coming in a range of sizes and lengths.' From: mdmmalice1 at aol.com (MdmMalice1) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Hiding a mundane tent Date: 4 Mar 1997 04:26:09 GMT All this talk of a tent cozy is making me extremely warm at the mere thought of it. Here in Trimaris, it sounds like you might end up with a canvas pressure cooker instead! So rather than that..might you not consider freestanding side walls? Just take poles equal to the height of your tent, set them in the ground in a rough U shape with your tent in the center, and run a rope from pole to pole. Then simply drape the rope with a light weight fabric. It need not be the same fabric all over and can even be painted with your device or other special symbols. Just anchor them down so the wind does not blow them out. With that done..take 3 more and place them in a line before your tent, the width of the tent itself (leaving enough room to walk out of your tent and not hit the poles). Again..set them in well, run the rope and drape the resulting two panels with your fabric. This would be a nice place to display you and your lady's devices. When this is all done..just step back..the mundane tent has vanished and you have a nice compound for yourselves. Melistra Lady Melistra D'Ombree, AoA Trimaris From: flanna at pobox.alaska.net Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Hiding a mundane tent Date: Tue, 04 Mar 1997 11:24:12 GMT Organization: Internet Alaska Inc. gileshill at aol.com (Gileshill) wrote: >Laura, assuming that a) you don't want to make any structural alterations >to your very nice (read: expensive) modern tent and b) that it isn't over >six feet tall, I'd recommend acquiring some portable holes* and making a >fabric screen to surround your tent. You can use patterned material, or >paint your heraldry on it, or just leave it natural. If you're likely to >encounter high winds, consider cutting windflaps into the cloth, to lessen >the wind resistance. >Giles Actually, one of the best or at least most amusing covers for a mundane tent or dining-fly, or even an 11x11 screen house that we've ever found has been a surplus parachute a friend gave us, in ivory and orange panels yet. I know it sounds horrid, but you would be surprised at how nicely it can make your structure look once it goes over it. Add some pennants and personal banners and the effect is really pretty spiffy! Do cut the shroud-lines off about 18" from the chute so you don't have them to trip on, and they can then be pegged to the ground a bit to the outside of your tent walls to provide air flow and storage for coolers, etc. Some friends were talking about using one over those really big "market umbrellas" with the wrought-iron stands that one can find in Costco and slitting it appropriately for a sun-fly. I find that concept fascinating and plan to give it a shot for day-trips this summer if possible...will let y'all know how or if it works! Flanna Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Hiding a mundane tent From: una at bregeuf.stonemarche.org (Honour Horne-Jaruk) Date: Wed, 05 Mar 97 07:11:49 EST tyrca at aol.com (Tyrca) writes: > Since this is your first camping event, you may not realize that only > the rich or obsessive among us has a period pavillion. This is just one > of the irresistable truths we have to deal with. My first tent was one of > those "earth pimples" that is vaguely shaped like an igloo. There is no > way to make it look "period", but it held my stuff, and gave me a place to > sleep. Respected friend: Actually, I figured this one out... See below. (snip) > Go and enjoy yourself, and come back and report to us here on the > bridge. > > Tyrca Ivarsdottir,oleander, AoA, OPN, ASTA > > Barony of Namron, Ansteorra If you wait until the end of beach season in your area, grass-cloth mats (the kind sold in a lot of oriental specialty shops) go down to $1-3 US each. Even if your dome tent is HUGE, $12 US or equivalent should get you enough mats to circle the bottom of your tent. Then you measure your tent from peg-to-peg across the top point. This is the diagonal measure of the "tarp" you make from cheap plain cloth- dark for cold areas, white for hot ones. A large sheet from a secondhand store works fine.Sew loops to each corner for pegging. Practice at home first. Set up the tent. place the mats around the bottom, overlapping ends and fastening tops so they stay wrapped. (DON'T pin them to the tent.) Then throw the "tarp" over and peg the corners in an even square, very close to the tent walls. From ten feet distance, your tent is now a small medieval haystack. I've done this several times and it really does work. It also gives you a chance, should you wish one, to ask your partner-of-choice to go for a roll in the hay. }:-> Only drawback: the mats may need to be removed when it's raining. With some tent fabrics, the mats touching the tent sides can cause leaks. (On the other hand, few people walk around looking at tents in the rain.) Placing a fake farm animal next to the tent may or may not add to the illusion; make sure it's a very _real_ looking fake. My dream-of-the-week -- Seeing an entire encampment of these at Pennsic, scattered between the pavilions, with accompanying life-size (medieval life-size) sheep and lambs. Total cost, for a two-person dome: between four and fifteen dollars US, depending on how good a bargain-hunter you are. And it's fun! Alizaunde, Demoiselle de Bregeuf Una Wicca (That Pict) (Friend) Honour Horne-Jaruk, R.S.F. From: alxandraod at aol.com (AlxandraOD) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Hiding a mundane tent Date: 25 Mar 1997 20:08:36 GMT I had an a-frame tent for years. Having a middle eastern persona, I covered the front of it (which was about all you could see, since we were packed so closely) with a large sheet of heavy cloth out of which I had cut a keyhole door. I edged the door (for stablility), painted 6 sided arabic stars around the door, and hung gauzy material in the opening to keep out flies and prying eyes. I completely obscured the mundane parts of the tent (i'd wrap and tie the material around the frame itself) and was a pleasant representation of my homeland in Morocco. And it was fun to make, to boot! Good luck. Suhayma From: moondrgn at bga.com (Chris and Elisabeth Zakes) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Nylon tent into Medieval pavilion? Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 01:35:29 GMT On 16 Apr 2001 00:00:04 GMT, an orbiting mind-control laser caused motleysong at aol.com (MotleySong) to write: >At this year's Pennsic, I would hate to detract from my household's encampment >with my blue-grey nylon dome tent, however I cannot afford to purchase/make an >entirely new Medieval pavilion. I had considered stitching together a canvas >tent-covering, but I'm not sure if that would work or if it would look any >better. This would just be a temporary thing until I get my pennies together >and come up with an actual pavilion of some sort. > >My question to you folks is this: Has anyone out there has had any success with >disguising their modern tents? Do you have any suggestions regarding this sort >of thing? Get a cover and some fabric paint (or see if you can find the right sort of camo-fabric) and paint it up so it looks like a haystack. -Tivar Moondragon Ansteorra From: "Mira (Tanya Guptill)" Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Nylon tent into Medieval pavilion? Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 10:47:12 -0700 Tivar wrote: > Get a cover and some fabric paint (or see if you can find the right > sort of camo-fabric) and paint it up so it looks like a haystack. I've seen a dome tent done beautifully as a pile of sticks, and also as a haystack, by having a 'cosy' made to fit over the tent, which has sticks or straw thickly attached all over it. Mira http://www.teleport.com/~tguptill/tent.html From: jmcadams at yin.interaccess.com (James Mcadams) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Nylon tent into Medieval pavilion? Date: 19 Apr 2001 15:01:05 -0500 Organization: InterAccess, Co. - Chicagoland's Full Service Internet Provider JE Anderson wrote: >> I've seen a dome tent done beautifully as a pile of sticks, and also as a >haystack, >> by having a 'cosy' made to fit over the tent, which has sticks or straw >thickly >> attached all over it. > >Mira, wuoldn't that be awefully hot inside???? As someone who used a nylon dome tent for several years I'm very doubtful that you can make one of them warmer in the summer. For those who haven't had the experience - a normal dome tent doesn't block the sunlight, it lets just enough through to create a greenhouse effect. I've left the "shade" of one such tent for the relative coolness of 100+ degree sunshine. Of course, I'm willing to be proven wrong (again). Louis Xavier ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Jim McAdams | Do, jmcadams at interaccess.com | or Do Not. 630-859-6902 | There is no "Try". - Yoda ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- From: "Mira (Tanya Guptill)" Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Nylon tent into Medieval pavilion? Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 22:30:10 -0700 Eirika, I thought so, too, until I realized that I was unable to see if they had done any sort of different venting/alterations due to the extra layer (such as a new flap(s) that could be opened to let heat escape, and sealed up against bad weather.) Warmly, Mira fellow An Tirian :) JE Anderson wrote: > "Mira (Tanya Guptill)" wrote in message > > > I've seen a dome tent done beautifully as a pile of sticks, and also as a > haystack, > > by having a 'cosy' made to fit over the tent, which has sticks or straw > > thickly attached all over it. > > Mira, wuoldn't that be awefully hot inside???? > > Eirika From: pyotr filipivich Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: Nylon tent into Medieval pavilion? Date: Sat, 21 Apr 2001 20:15:16 -0700 Organization: Fortesque Labs I've always considered getting a hold of some cammo netting. "It's not a tent, it's a hermits hut. Nicely done, with mud and moss ..." Nikolai Petrovich Flandropoff Whimiscal Order of the Ailing Wit General Secretary for Clan MacFlandry Loose Canon, Heavy Opera Company of An Tir From: satyrsong at aol.comLEAD (SATYRSONG) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Date: 05 Jul 2001 21:16:04 GMT Subject: Re: Medieval-izing EZ-UPs I've seen everything from a simple add-on of dagging to the comercial roof to a fully remade roof. As I use mine as a shop at Ren-faires, I had Panther Pavillions make a custom roof for me, with extra long rain flaps that fold up to hide the racks around the edges of the tent and to better help secure the roof to the frame. Little tie-on "drapes" hide the center racks and do not impede air flow. "Socks" hide the metal legs. All depends on how far you want to go! SS Trimaris << With mundane EZ-UP (pop-up shade pavilions) prices dropping and dropping and the EZ-UPs themselves getting lighter and easier to put up, EZ-UPs are becoming a very popular shade pavilion at events and tournaments. Does anyone have any suggestions/hints for making these EZ-UPs look more medieval-ish so that they'll fit in with the rest of the surroundings? Katheline van Weye Atenveldt >> Edited by Mark S. Harris tent-dsguises-msg Page 10 of 10