• Design
  • About
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • Shop
JaronKent Designs
  • Design
  • About
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • Shop

LITEPANELS' APOLLO BRIDGE DEMO

GPTempDownload.JPG
IMG_0593.JPG
7A7E014B-64E1-4E71-93DD-42C9D0127B97_1_201_a.jpeg
IMG_0594.JPG
08EAA150-A7D4-4071-81D6-BFB1E6F59963.jpeg
Image from Litepanels.com

Image from Litepanels.com

Cinematographers, Gaffers and Pop Up Theater friends! The new Apollo Bridge from Litepanels is quite awesome and will and your life easy! I am not being paid to say these things!.

Over this last year I have been working on the lighting rig design for Little Giant Ladder’s Broadcast Studios, I utilized Litepanels gear left & right (More on this later). Recently The peeps there sent me their new wireless DMX bridge system to test out, and boy does it make things simple. This guys will bridge your 2.4 or 5GHz networks with your wireless DMX as well as link to your Gemini units directly. AND this will connect to your lumen radio to control your existing networks! 

IMG_8F9E7A18CEC2-1.jpeg

All of this is controlled through the free Lighticians App. The easy to use interface kept me from running from unit to unit to dial in. Instead I could sit behind the monitor and control each individual light. There are couple things I wanted from the app, like a cue stack system and a couple other nuances but I have been told these are in the pipeline! I found Lightician made patching a breeze. And saving my custom color swatches made unifying the custom color in each of my lights throughout all of my systems, and quick. And of course being able to bounce between HSI and Color temp right in the unit control page is amazing for switching any given unit between Key light and my creative fill!

Between the Lightician App & the Apollo Bridge I can see a ton of applications. Of course the original purpose: film sets! In the broadcast studios we had an existing network, so we plugged it in and attached it to our lumen radios and hooked up a few additional lights. On location this gear is a game changer, making it easier and quicker to control your lights AS you shoot. AND if you know me, you know I do A LOT of live theater and events. This is a perfect application if you don’t have the traditional infrastructure for a full light rig (looking at you storefront and pop up pandemic theater groups). 

Check out the Apollo bridge on the LITEPANELS site below: let me know your thoughts!

Visit Litepanes
tags: lighting, film lighting, control, DMX, wireless DMX
categories: Lighting Design, Film Lighting, Product Demo
Tuesday 04.27.21
Posted by Jaron Hermansen
 

The Tinder Box

D4F90686-0ECE-4F52-8283-B0A4825EE2EF.jpeg

The Tinder Box

Tale of Two Cities at HCT

The Tinderbox from A Tale of Two Cities is a character in and of itself. Set designer Kacey Udy came to me with his vision of a Slated Ramp that we could light from the inside. We immediately began collaborating on how we could make this work. I took this idea and developed it into a character for the story. Using the element of color & effects The Ramp became known as the Tinder box, as it appears to be burning from the inside from time to time, It follows the over arching journey of the story’s protagonist. It takes 28 Chauvet Baton Quads equalling 336 individually controlled pixels and just under 3 DMX universes to make this scenic element shine.

7612BDBB-289D-46E9-AFE5-3E57B3958B19.jpeg
8A3DD37F-5F65-4DB5-A3A8-29F0C284860B.png
3A3FCB09-0C74-4B6A-A069-E018CDEDB04C.jpeg

Scenic design by Kacey Udy, Lighting Design by Jaron Kent Hermansen, Production Electrician work by Danna Barney & Michael Gray. Photo by Gage Peterson 

.

tags: lightingdesign #lighting #stagelighting #design #designer #taleoftwocities #theater #theatre #chauvet #hct #vectorworks, lighting, stage lighting, Hale, Design
categories: Lighting Design, Theatre, Behind the scenes
Wednesday 02.17.21
Posted by Jaron Hermansen