03/10/2026
Harness the power of by getting comfortable with the effects tab. đĽ
Iâll be honest, this part intimidated me at first.
If you come from apps like Astera or Sidus Link, a lot of effects are already built for you (which is awesome.) You just tweak the parameters and go. Blackout is different. You build from the ground up.
That learning curve can feel steeper, but the payoff is way more flexibility and creative control. Once you understand the basics, it starts to click.
It helps to think of effects like building blocks. Parameters changing over time, following a pattern, spread across multiple fixtures.
For this moody pulsing nightclub look, we:
- selected the fixtures,
- built a dark base look with saturated color,
- used intensity as the effect parameter to make the lights breathe,
- set a slow-to-medium speed for a rhythmic pulse,
and spread the phase so the fixtures werenât moving in perfect unison. That phase offset is what gives it life.
The most important part is refining by eye. Work with your DP and adjust until it feels rich and moody, not chaotic or distracting. Unless chaotic is the goal. đ¤Ş
Then save it so you can bring it back instantly on cue.
For a deeper dive, check out the Blackout YouTube channel. Lots of great info there!
This setup used a handful of .lighting Infinibar PB12s in the ceiling for pulsing color washes, a LiteMat Spectrum 4 through 6x 1/2 grid as the key to keep skin tones looking good, and two .global Forza 60Cs with lekos. One for the disco ball, the other handheld for lens flares and wipes across talent. Add a few small party lights in the background. and, of course, plenty of haze. đ¨
Production
Director .sean
Producer
DP
AC .mov
2AC
Key G
Best G
Best E
PA
Sound