I was laying in bed this morning, and I was thinking about what homework I had to do for today. The rest was cake (I mean by that easy, not the dessert. I wish my homework was to eat cake), but I was stumped on the blog entry. I hadn't been inspired too much this week, I was busy and had lots of work to take care of the entire time. It was sort of windy this morning, so my blinds were rattling and letting more light in, creating a picture on the floor and on my bed of the fluctuating rays. At first I was bothered by it because it was getting in my eyes, but then I started watching it on my bed spread and it was a really interesting sight. Then I got to thinking about gobos and how I could recreate that on a theatre stage. I know we have ways of making gobos spin with smart lights, but what about making them actually move? We'd have to use projectors aimed at the ground to get that quality. Which wouldn't be too pricey if you already had one! But if you wanted them to move different places during the show you'd have to either hang more or create a moving projector. I should invent ones that are small enough to easily be hung next to or above the light fixtures! Any one who reads this blog had better not steal my idea, it could be worth millions someday. Or maybe it's already an invention, I'll have to research further! Anywho, that's a journey into the brain of Kiliaen Van Rensselaer.
Until next week!
P.S. Excuse the messy room ;P
moving light projectors already exits - look up high ends dl1 - and also, what you are talking about can be done by moving lights, twin spins and projector
ReplyDeletethe issue with projectors is usually matching the intensity of other lights