Balloon Lighting, Klan Shoot Out in the Swamp, Bad Boys 2 / Photo Credit: Bruce Bisbey
BALLOON LIGHTS… (In the Entertainment
industry. Balloon Lighting)
Balloon Lighting
Balloon lights (also called lighting balloons) are a
specialized type of luminaire used primarily for lighting in the motion picture
industry, night highway construction, incident management, and public security
applications such as police checkpoints. These luminaires typically consist of
one or more high-intensity lamps surrounded by a translucent fabric balloon.
The balloon acts as a diffuser to soften and disperse the light. The upper
portion of the balloon sometimes has a reflective inner coating to direct more
of the light downward. Some commercial products use a blower to expand the
balloon, while others have an umbrella-like internal wire frame. The device is
essentially an industrial version of a Japanese paper lantern.
The lighting balloon was first patented in Germany on
October 26, 1924 (patent #427894). Until the 1990s, several patents were
issued, although the application was utilized very little in Western countries.
The lighting balloon industry has been greatly modernized by the company
Airstar.
Airstar
In 1994, Pierre Chabert and Benoit Beylier, founder of
Airstar, a French company based in Grenoble (Isère), created a balloon light, a
self-supporting spacelight suspended in a helium-inflated balloon. It is ideal
for interiors or exteriors where rigging is a problem. One of the first movies
ever lit with this kind of system, which was supplied by Airlight Industries,
was Titanic, directed by James Cameron. Later they were used in the Opening
Ceremony of the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, the lighting set for Pirates of
the Caribbean, Rang De Basanti, Sivaji, Avatar, Singapore Grand Prix and the
Vancouver Olympics.
Airlight Industries
In 1995, entrepreneur Julian Del Valle of Newport Beach,
California discovered AIRSTAR lighting balloons at a private event
demonstration in Los Angeles. He created Airlight Industries to become the
first distributor of Airstar lighting balloons in the United States with the
intent of using them in the film industry. Del Valle represented Airlight
Industries with Airstar products at Show Biz Expo 1995. At the show, he met
director of photography and gaffer Tony Nakonechnyj, and supplied him with
AIRSTAR balloons for Disturbing the Peace. That was the first use of a lighting
balloon on a motion picture set in the United States. It was immediately
followed by supplying all lighting balloons on the set of Titanic, aiding
Russell Carpenter in winning the Academy Award for Cinematography.
Available Light
In 1996, Available Light becomes the first company to
introduce lighting balloons to the film and television market on the East Coast
of the US. Available Light also decided to require operators for their
balloons, becoming the first company in the United States to do this. In making
this decision, Available Light created the category of Lighting Balloon
Technician. They choose Airstar balloons, and introduce them to the East Coast
market in film, television and commercials. The business is a perfect complement
to the company that is an industry leader in specialized lighting for these
markets.
Powermoon
Tripod-mounted balloon light in an incident management
application.
In 1998 German based Noelle IUT GmbH developed (next to
its air-inflated systems) a patented spring-loaded 'umbrella-style' balloon
light called Powermoon®. Looking to serve industries which are known for their
tough work environments and rough treatments of tools (Construction, Fire
Rescue EMS, Military, Law Enforcement, Farming etc.), Powermoon® mechanical
balloon lights differ from air-inflated system in that the balloon inflation is
realized with springs that open and close the balloon cover strictly
mechanically, making it a reliable solution while offering the same glare-free
and shadow-diffused light quality known from air-inflated systems. Quickly
becoming a real alternative and eventually market leader in the European
market, Powermoon® Enterprises Ltd incorporated in the US in 2005, distributing
its technology from Atlanta GA to all of North and Central America.
With its focus on reliability in rough work environments,
Powermoon® in 2012 also was the first balloon light manufacturer to offer
balloon lights equipped with high-powered LED (light-emitting diode) lighting
systems which were able to compete with traditional bulb and lighting
technologies in the ability to cover large areas. Not only was LED technology
much more reliable and durable in rough work environments, but it also offered
higher efficiency, better light quality and closer to daylight color rendering
(5500K). Since LED allowed for usage on DC (direct current) and AC (alternating
current) systems, Powermoon® decided to introduce a shift in paradigm by
offering high-powered lighting systems on AC as well as DC, making LED balloon
lights available for usage on all types of DC battery-supported systems
(trucks, construction machinery, EMS vehicles) as well as all AC power systems
(main outlets, generators etc.). Offering availability of this amount of area
lighting for DC supported vehicles and machinery earned Powermoon® in 2014 the
award "Asphalt Contractor's Top 30 Editor's Choice Products".
Sourcemaker, Inc.
Peter Girolami purchased Airlight Industries in 2001 and
reopened as Sourcemaker, Inc with the goal of creating custom lighting balloons
for the film industry. Girolami rented the purchased lighting balloons but
experienced difficulties purchasing replacement parts from Airstar because of
bad payments. Girolami then began to manufacture his own replacement parts. He
researched new materials and laminates to create a softer quality of light that
is UV protected to prevent yellowing of the balloon envelopes. He also
developed the cube and rectangle-shaped lighting balloons with new durable
materials and the first helium-tight internal reflector to help control ambiance
on film sets. The new shape allowed the cinematographer and gaffer to black out
any side by attaching lightweight materials. Gaffer Russ Engels used the first
cube-shaped lighting balloon.
Novo Lighting Ltd.
Novo Lighting Ltd was founded in 2012 by Dylan Paul and
Joern Novotny in Vancouver BC Canada. Novo Lighting provides balloon lights in
tube, spherical and cloud shape to the local film industry in Vancouver and
British Columbia. The balloons are manufactured by TEXXOCOM owned and operated
by Fabian Friedrich.
Balloon shapes
- Spherical and near-spherical is the most common variety.
The shape of the units demonstrate wind resistance…
- Cubic - cuboid balloons with rigging points at the
corners, "Diamond series by Airstar", "Ceilair by Airstar",
useful for cutting the light with reflector panels…
- Tube - cylindrical shape, with a more "directed"
light. AIRSTAR…
- Cloud - Grip balloon, low profile tuboid. Intended to
semi-block the sun. Used by grips…
- Alternative lighting sources…
Light types:
- Tungsten…
- HMI…
- Metal halide…
- Mercury vapor…
- Sodium vapor…
- Light Emitting Diodes…
HMI Helium Balloon Lights
Filled with helium gas, the Lunar HMI Helium Balloon can
illuminate areas ranging from 1200 to 36,000 sq. yards (1000 to 30,000m²) with
unequaled power. Thanks to the shape and the envelope texture, the HMI Lunar
Balloons diffuses gentle, glare-free light, equivalent to daylight, providing
high performance, all round illumination.
Operation is simple – the light is tethered to the ground,
then inflated with helium, and the balloons rise to the correct height. The HMI
Balloon is available from 2000W to 12000W, which produces remarkable 1,200,000
lumens*. It provides an evenly distributed light, with no hot spots or shadows,
and achieves 6000° Kelvin – making the light almost identical in color and
brightness as daylight.
Sources,
References & Credits: Google, Wikipedia, Wikihow, Pinterest, IMDB, Linked
In, Indie Wire, Film Making Stuff, Hiive, Film Daily, New York Film Academy, The
Balance, The Numbers, Film Maker, TV Guide Magazine, Media Match, Quora, Creative
Skill Set, Investopedia, Variety, No Film School, Daily Variety, The Film
Agency, Best Sample Resume, How Stuff Works, Career Trend, Producer's Code of
Credits, Producers Guild of America, Film Connection, Entertainment Careers, Adhere
Creative, In Deed, Glass Door, Pay Scale, Merriam-Webster, Job Monkey, Studio
Binder, The Collective, Production Hub, The Producer's Business Handbook by
John J. Lee Jr., Airstar, Available Light, Sourcemaker, Powermoon, Lunar
Lighting
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Loved Bad Boys 2, saw your name in the credits, nice. xo Letha
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