Having participated in PE's workshop and tried out the coating blade, I think I can see the problems associated with rollfilm at home. I don't know that the support is such a problem--you could use, say, clear 35mm movie film leader.
The coating blade method as I've seen it--correct me if I'm wrong, Ron--depends on the properties of gelatin to spread when warm and set fairly quickly as it cools. So say you've taped down a 6.5 foot strip of 35mm film on a long flat level surface (a little extra for the start and end points). You've got to fill the reservoir of the coating blade with enough emulsion and keep it warm enough to draw it from one end of the strip to the other without the gelatin setting. Maybe increasing the size and mass of the blade would allow it to hold enough emulsion and stay warm long enough for this to work, but it seems it would be tricky to get an even enough coating by hand methods to stand the enlargement factor expected of a 35mm film.
The coating blade method as I've seen it--correct me if I'm wrong, Ron--depends on the properties of gelatin to spread when warm and set fairly quickly as it cools. So say you've taped down a 6.5 foot strip of 35mm film on a long flat level surface (a little extra for the start and end points). You've got to fill the reservoir of the coating blade with enough emulsion and keep it warm enough to draw it from one end of the strip to the other without the gelatin setting. Maybe increasing the size and mass of the blade would allow it to hold enough emulsion and stay warm long enough for this to work, but it seems it would be tricky to get an even enough coating by hand methods to stand the enlargement factor expected of a 35mm film.