Projection on textural backdrop that also acts as scrim to reveal dancer on cue

Posted on November 2nd, 2012

So we incorporated dance this past weekend. Some backstory on the #productiondesign that I didn’t share with anybody until after we saw it work: A few weeks back, I had a dream where the setting had me on a stage. A subplot of the dream involved me consulting a redesign of the scenic and lighting. I literally designed the light plot in my sleep. In the dream I positioned stage decks upstage of a sheer fabric so a dancer could be seen in a veiled manner behind a band playing live on the apron. Crazy, but this honestly happened as a subplot of my dream! When our producer shared the vision for the YRLK song I knew I had already designed the look…and I didn’t dare share my inspiration until we saw it live!

Ingredients:

The band was an eclectic mix of guitars, kick drum, a violin, and a couple low horns that I arrayed in a semicircle on a rug DSC

I used strips of Silver Batiste from RoseBrand to create a 40’ wide "seamless backdrop" that we lit with LEDs and Gobos

Upstage of the fabric we built stage decks for the dancer that we lit with toplight gobo and some shinbusters for the reveal








Some leaders want to make followers…I want to make leaders of leaders of leaders

Posted on November 1st, 2012

"Some leaders want to make followers. I want to make leaders. Not only do I want to make leaders, but leaders of leaders. And then, leaders of leaders of leaders."

Dale Galloway (via John Maxwell)

#ProductionDesign Ingredients: Duvetyn, iron stands, ellipsoidal backs, fake cobweb material,...

Posted on October 8th, 2012

#ProductionDesign Ingredients: Duvetyn, iron stands, ellipsoidal backs, fake cobweb material, and a few conventional lights.






Story2012 ProductionDesign

Posted on September 25th, 2012

Our goal was to create a space where lush beauty, artistic rock n roll, cinematic storytelling, and spoken communication could challenge and inspire for a 2 day conference.
An original sponsor backed out shortly before the event. I was honored to get the call. Can I design something for this shallow stage that can carry all the unique elements planned (several keynote presentations, multiple live music performances, interviews, short films, etc.) with immersive depth and beauty? Can I create an inspiring design that can tie in to already created branding? Can we break the fourth wall into the room? Can I do it with zero purchase - using only donated/recycled material? Can I transport it from Detroit to Chicago in my minivan? Can I lead the setup and execution with a team of volunteers (most of whom are young college students with no experience) that I've never met before? Can the setup be completed in a single day?

This is the view of the room. It was actually a little bit of a bummer to cover up the windows where you could see the Chicago skyline out of the stage left window in the back depth. However, the theme was not Chicago, but rather Everywhere. We wanted to transport people to a place of imagination.

The journey to get to from concept to actual design (including materials list, rigging notes, lighting plot, setup checklist, and rendering of vision) took a lot of iteration. It required lots of emails including scanned sketches and study of blueprints of venue that I was out of town and not able to do an in-person site-survey. We also utilized video conferencing for "face-to-face collaboration between Executive Producer, Production Manager, and myself, the Production Designer) including screen-sharing and digital sketching. The most interesting development was the week-of donation of an LED screen that let us gain a lot of stage space because of the throw distance not being required; which was great for the final product, but required some last minute adaptability in redesign of all the rigging and the plot. One of the key layers of this design that wasn’t there when I arrived at the venue was four lekos with abstract gobos. I pushed way hard for the day of rehearsal that our PM managed to find a way to procure the morning of the conference was isome theatrical gobos to throw textural light at the curtains. Sometimes it's the simple, old-school, theatrical tricks that really create the mood and set the tone for the experience. When the team saw them turn on only minutes before doors opened, they realized why I was pushing so hard for such. Magical!

The following screenshots show the final design plot as well as the iteration sketches, blueprint, and in process diagrams:


Crushed Screen-door strips hung between black pipe as textured depth-of-field behind live art. Burgundy CommandoCloth (from Rose Brand) finessed into a House of Blues inspired "theatrical proscenium" finished with three cords to "tie it" into a reveal. Our center focal point is a large LED Wall. Throughout the room are 12 chandeliers. In addition to being beautiful, I wanted to include them in the design to communicate this year’s theme "Everywhere". We’re called as the Creative Class to be light to the world, the best way to go out into the world is in community; not as an individual light but as a beautiful community of oneness. Therefore I see the symbolism that each chandelier represents the 12 tribes of the historical scriptures into all the world…
Oh, and the piano, harp, and guitar in the mid-depth behind the SL interview area: I only placed that there because we had the equipment in the wings and I thought they’d look pretty.



time for a new phone

Posted on September 11th, 2012

I quite loved my HTC Aria for the first 18months of it’s time at my side. It’s tiny and (was) amazing. When I got it it was superior in almost every way to my old iPhone 3G - smaller (which I believe to be a good thing), better camera, better battery, integration with the Google universe, etc. - there was nothing it couldn’t do that the iPhone could and it could do things that the iPhone couldn’t. Oh, and I got it for less than half the price of a new iPhone. Sadly, now it must be retired. It has definitely been phased out of a usefulness. The once amazing battery now struggles to make it to dinnertime, and that if I use it for not much more than a dumbphone would do. If I want to use maps or post many photos, I better have a charger ready. Further issues include questionable refreshing of gmails when I go to fetch; and routinely I have to relogin to twitter. All very frustrating!

Ok, so the question is what to get. Any brand of phone now seems to be able to do everything I’d try to use a phone to do. Perhaps my highest value: Size. It must be small. I do not want to try to stuff a tablet in my pocket.

I think this means I’m going back to iPhone. The question is: iPhone 4S or New iPhone? I’m all for Android, but is there any decent small model?

I think the 4S is my best choice for size and bang-for-the-buck (once the price drops with the New iPhone’s release) however my concern is that it will be phased out in a year.


Dinner With A Perfect Stranger

Posted on August 21st, 2012

Scenic & Lighting Design

This was one of my earliest theatrical designs. It was a privilege to be invited to this project and bring the book to life on the stage. The following illustrates the process of creation:
  1. Read the script (still in rough version adapted from the book)
  2. Ideate with the Producer and Director
  3. Research Italian restaurants
  4. Sketch concepts
  5. Development and refinement
  6. Scale drawings
  7. Texture, paint, functionals, decor
  8. Custom table design tilted downstage slightly for audience
  9. Lighting Design
  10. Additions of floor and pillar
  11. Sign off on build process and finishing details like paint, texture, stain, electrical, etc.
  12. Transportation entire set has to transport in trailer, fit through standard doors, and setup/strike quickly for multiple venues
  13. Oversee setup and lighting focus
  14. Program lighting


Rules of good storytelling by Pixar

Posted on June 16th, 2012


Only those who believe in the beautiful can collaborate in the miraculous.

Posted on June 7th, 2012

Only those who believe in the beautiful can collaborate in the miraculous.

Ann Voskamp (via @wolfejessica)

Moonset and Sunrise. Encouraging prelude to Easter

Posted on April 7th, 2012

Stopped on my drive in to snap these shots of the moonset and sunrise. Encouraging prelude to #kensingtoneaster








Busy

Posted on March 15th, 2012

I just tallied it up: In just the past 2 days, I worked on 16 different #productiondesign projects!
Ranging from interior decoration, RED video shoots, proprietary technology CNC design, a summer camp that travels to multiple sites, quite a number of midweek-weekend-and-back turns, and of course Easter. #toobusyfortwitter


Eric G Wolfe

Creative Director | Process Architect. Design Strategist. Leadership Coach.