1 / 9

October 15, 2012

October 15, 2012. Warm Up: Why are front lights important in a lighting design? Does that make them more important that fill lights? Objective: Students will complete their sample lighting design and instrument schedule. Review. Can you use the magic number to create acting areas on stage?

mai
Download Presentation

October 15, 2012

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. October 15, 2012 Warm Up: Why are front lights important in a lighting design? Does that make them more important that fill lights? Objective: Students will complete their sample lighting design and instrument schedule.

  2. Review • Can you use the magic number to create acting areas on stage? • Can you place your front lights onstage for each acting area? • Do you know the primary difference between a front light (ERS/spotlight) versus a fill light (PAR or Fresnel)?

  3. To spot or to fill? • Spotlights identify specific areas of the stage. • Fill lights light up general areas of the stage. • Spotlights must fit (or go slightly larger) than an acting area. • Fill lights can go as big as you want. • What is the trade off in terms of intensity of the light?

  4. Placing Fill Lights • 1. Determine where you want the light to shine and what it’s going to do. • Color Wash – spreading color of the stage • Side Light – more directly to the side, specifically in dance • Mood/Accent lighting – back lighting/cool shadows effects • 2. Put it there and note what kind of light it is: Fresnel (Fres) or PAR

  5. Color Theory – as simply as I can • Lighting color is different from paint color. • Paint color is a reflection of light from a colored surface (you only see the light it is reflecting). Do you know how your eye works? • Lighting Color is the light allowed through the gel and that shines on stage. • Vote: Do you want more understanding of how stage light coloring works?

  6. Applying Colors to stage lights • Choose your colors from a color book (sorry, Barbizon had ONE extra…so we’re going to have to share or something). • You should have a warm and a cool color for your front lights that are fairly unsaturated (>75% transmission). This allows us to actually see what’s happening. • Colors with <25% transmission are difficult to discern as front lights

  7. Applying Color • Choose your side/fill/special colors. • Write down the names and numbers somewhere for your instrument schedule. • Each color goes with the rest of your information on your plot (board example)

  8. Numbering Lights • Conventions: Keep colors in families. Examples: Warm Front lights 1-6, Cool Front lights 7-12, Green Wash 20-25, Yellow Wash 30-35, ect… • We name lights for each of programming light board and setting up control channels and cues.

  9. Instrument Schedule • A chart that shows all of the collected information that is used by the master electrician when determining all lights hung properly.

More Related