This year’s Children’s Winter Games was held in Lake Placid, New York, and featured an array of fixtures from ADJ.
Having worked with the historic Olympic Centre on countless competitions, lighting designer Eric Wilson was brought in to deliver a lightshow for the Children’s Winter Games opening ceremony. A long-time user, he called on a wide range of ADJ’s versatile fixtures and controllers to actualize his vision for the opening celebrations.
Inside the large arena, 12 ADJ Vizi BSW 300s and 12 ADJ Vizi Beam RXONEs formed the crux of the lighting setup. The ceremony was laid out in a horseshoe shape, with a central facade and truss archway forming the visual focus for the audience up in the bleachers. To ensure enough coverage across this large space, Eric placed the moving heads up in the bleachers, spacing them out approximately every eight feet.
“The moving heads ran all the way round the horseshoe,” explained Wilson. “We used the BSWs for a combination of tight washes and wider washes with a prism effect. So we did shoot a GOBO, but we used the prism to blur it and then added rotation, creating this unique water effect – so much more than just a straight wash! I am also very familiar with the capabilities of the RXONEs, so I knew that the tight 3-degree beam angle would do exactly what I wanted for aerials.”
Together, the Vizi BSW 300s and Vizi Beam RXONEs accomplished a big-impact display, with the former washing the ice in lush colors – drawing on its potent 300W output and variable 18 ~ 26-degree wash beam angle – and the latter creating stunning mid-air effects thanks to its super-sharp 3-degree beam angle, smooth micro-stepped movement and choice of 14 colors plus white and 15 GOBOs plus spot. But when it came to the Vizi BSW 300s, the role they played went even further.
“The BSW 300 is an incredibly versatile unit and we used it predominantly for the washes. But, because it is a hybrid fixture, it also offered us so much more! When the torch came in, we used them to create a search light effect, and that looked pretty damn cool,” Eric told us. “When I designed this event, that was kind of the idea; I needed to be able to light up the athletes on the ice as well as create aerial effects, and the BSWs could cover both jobs.”
Before the ceremony actually started, it was 8 ADJ Vizi Spot Pros that put in the work – projecting custom snowflake GOBOs to tie in with the winter theme.
“My Vizi Spot Pros are around ten years old but are still going strong and weren’t out of place in the arena setting,” he said. “Obviously, they weren’t as bright as the BSWs or RXONEs, so we primarily used them for the pre-show. They did a great job of projecting snowflake patterns so that they appeared to float around the arena – both on the ice and around the bleachers – as people were being seated. Then, when the show started and we fired up the newer moving heads, we were able to create real impact.”
As most lighting designers / production managers will attest to, it’s very rare that any event goes without a hitch; something to challenge you and force you to get creative with your lighting fixtures. For Wilson, this challenge came by way of a lost GOBO.
Wilson had promised his clients that he would project the Games logo as well as a sponsor logo down onto the ice, and had arranged for custom GOBOs to be created for the BSWs. However, during setup one of the crew managed to lose one, throwing a real spanner into the works. Not wanting to disappoint, Wilson re-created the logos on transparencies with a laser printer, and used ADJ Ikon Profiles to project the patterns down from a gantry 52ft above the ice.
Wilson also used ADJ Inno Pocket Z4s, which were mounted on top of the archway truss and used to provide various color-changing wash effects thanks to its variable tight or wide beam angle and 10W quad-color LEDs.
“The Inno Pocket Z4s are versatile little fixtures, which we used in two different ways,” explained Wilson. “First, we set them to white and a wide beam angle to illuminate the children as they walked through the arch so that the cameras could pick them up. Then, once the kids were out in the arena, we switched to tighter beams and recreated the colors of the flag for that particular national team. We also applied the same principle to the rest of the lighting rig. So, when the US team walked in waving their flag, the Z4s were doing high-energy chases in red, white and blue, while in the rest of the arena we had the Vizi Spot Pros projecting star GOBOs, the BSWs doing a vibrant red wash and the RXONEs shooting out white beams for the stripes.”
Wilson also utilized a set of compact, battery-powered WiFLY EXR Hex Pars, whose hex-color LEDs and adjustable dual-bracket yoke ensured he could splash the blue backdrop in the perfect white hue for a sleek finish. Meanwhile, the truss pillars themselves were lit using ADJ Mega Go Par 64s.
All of this was tied together thanks to the ADJ Compu Show and myDMX 3.0 lighting control software. Programmer and operator Edgar Gonzales used Compu Show alongside an Elation Professional MIDICON II for the main lightshow, while Corey Hoffman was down on the ice operating myDMX to run the Z4s and Mega Go Par 64s.