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Audience Perspective

Using Dead People

   So I was talking to a psychic the other day. She told me that dead people are bored a lot of time and are looking for a job they can do to help out people here on earth.

Dream Theater LIVE in Phoenix

So below is my sketch (sorry I was having trouble importing my 3ds max version) of Dream Theater’s lighting rig for their summer tour. If you’ve seen it in person you’d know it looks bad ass.

Label It

I use Vectorworks for drawings, and I use Microsoft Vizio to draw a lot of my data diagrams. I use Excel, Visual Basic and Microsoft… Read More »Label It

Coming Together

For the past few days, I've been spending a lot of my time watching tech. rehearsals, doing small, odd jobs and helping in whatever way l can, but it's given me the opportunity ask lots of obnoxious questions and a lot about lighting design.

Pyrotechnics to Time-Lapse Photography

The more time I spend here, the more I seem to discover the enormous scope of a lighting technician's job. Yesterday, for example, I helped log the RSC's recent purchases on to a spread sheet and even though it might sound strange, I actually had a lot of fun discovering everything that the RSC had to buy for their recent shows, Richard II and Henry IV parts I and II.

the color green

For a long time I've been wondering why most Lighting designers stay away from the color green. They certainly like it on their currency, but they rarely use it on stage. 

And it's not fair. Green is my second favorite color and I use it all the time. It goes so well with blue or magenta. It turns into a great rock color when joined by amber. At Christmas time is the only time I will use it with red, but that's because you can get away with it then. But mix some hard edge lights in green with a congo or lav stage wash and you have instant sexy colors. Pale green is fantastic to use in any stop cues in a music based show. So why are people afraid of it?