December 17, 2008UVLD Supports Scion Event At Toyota Dealer Meeting WITH LIGHTING AND MEDIA SERVERS FOR PRODUCT REVEALS
Unlimited Visibility Lighting Design supported o2 Creative Solutions with lighting and video projection for a
pair of dramatic Scion product reveals during an event promoting the young, hip
brand at the Toyota National Dealer
Meeting held in Las Vegas. The
event was produced by o2 Creative Solutions. o2 Principal Brian Hords provided the creative vision and
direction for the production team. Joe Bartusis of Go Staging provided
technical direction and production management.
“Two new products were unveiled in two
distinctly different ways,” notes Visual Design Engineer Cameron Yeary of
UVLD. “One was a virtual reveal
using the Musion Eyeliner hologram effect and the other featured a prototype
vehicle flown in from the ceiling.
We were tasked with lighting the space and facilitating the video
projections for the reveals.”
The client wanted to create an industrial,
club-like atmosphere for the event. “They left a portion of the Shoreline
Ballroom raw with black drape for boundaries and asymmetric gray walls as
projection surfaces,” explains David Rees who acted as UVLD’s co-lighting
designer with John Ingram. “The
atypical stage design created some unique challenges for the design
team. There were two primary
playing areas. The first mimicked
a traditional proscenium design but was occupied by the elaborate hologram
effect; the lighting there had to be very precise to support the it. Afterwards, the audience focus shifted
elsewhere toward the second of the two reveals. The production utilized lighting and projection to direct
the audience’s attention to the more vibrant, live reveal. UVLD sought to
create a mood that echoed the brand’s young, hip vibe while supporting the live
car reveal as the vehicle was flown in.
Instead of trying to hide the ballroom’s
architecture, UVLD lit its columns and structural beams to lend an edgy, club
feel to the space. “We used a
truss structure that paralleled the scenic projection walls to complement the
unique angular nature of the space,” says Rees. “Then we set up lighting positions around 13 hanging
projectors.”
“We used lighter value colors to create a
relaxed, clubby atmosphere instead of the feel of a formal show,” Rees points
out. “There was no guest seating:
People hung out at the bar then came to the main stage to watch the
presentation.”
The club theme continued for a second
night when hiphop artist De La Soul performed on stage and additional vehicles
were showcased.
A secondary space, dubbed The Lounge, was
treated by UVLD with Scion-branded logos and moving-light textures, which
complemented existing Scion graphics.
“The event marked the first time we used
the new MBox version 3 dual-output media server,” notes Yeary. “We had seven MBoxes with six providing
dual output for seamless blends across the breadth of the scenic walls. The
seventh MBox output a 1080p signal for the 60x15-foot center projection
screen.”
Content leading up to the product reveal
was largely client driven and produced by o2 Creative Solutions, which crafted
more than 100 gigs of imagery with multilayered text animations. “They came to us to work with them on
the visual effects,” says Yeary.
“The reason we love to use media servers is the ability to easily change
visuals on site. Creative ideas
often morph as we implement the design.
With the MBoxes, we have the power to re-render, re-cut and deploy the
altered media quickly and efficiently.
More traditional methods of media playback don’t offer the same real
time flexibility.”
Yeary determined the pixel space
available to o2 Creative Solutions which delivered very large image files,
sometimes 1 or 2 gigs in size.
UVLD brings a full video-editing suite to each media job -- with a
compliment of software programs and years of experience working with them, the company
can manipulate the client’s media as needed.
Imagery for widescreen projection screen
was projected by two Barco projectors and blended via Encore. The perimeter grey walls required 11
Sanyo xf35 projectors.
“o2
produces more large format, non-traditional media scapes then most
companies in the world. We’ve used
many different systems for media control and playback in the past but I can
honestly say that the Mbox is by far the best in terms of adaptability, ease of
use and creative expression. The
possibilities are endless and the process is refreshing,” stated Brian Hords of
o2.