Haze Days

08 Jul.,2024

 

Haze Days

Duke Dejong answers the question: &#;How much haze should you use?&#;

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We&#;ve entered a new era for churches, one where intelligent lights have become not only accepted but fairly common.  We&#;re seeing a lot of attention paid to the look and design of our stages and lighting, and one tool that really makes lighting look great is haze. So how much haze should you use?

The short answer: You need as much as it takes to create the look you want.  Genius right?  I can&#;t tell you specifically how much you need because you need to figure out how much is right for your church by talking with your church leadership and trying out some different amounts.  What I can do is help you figure out what you are trying to accomplish with your haze, which should lead to that answer.  Keep in mind these concepts hold true whether you use oil or water based or one large hazer vs. many smaller ones.

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Simply stated haze is used to help people see lighting beams across the open air, allowing you to &#;paint&#; the air with color and shapes.  When used effectively it&#;s a very cool visual element to have and can be a very useful design tool.  The addition of haze allows you to effectively design a look on your stage without having any actual sets. There are three questions in a church environment I think should help determine that.

  1. Does the haze need to dissipate by the time the message starts?
    Haze inherently stays in the air for so long, and the thicker your haze is the longer it takes to dissipate and disappear.  If your pastor is not comfortable with a little haze being in the air while he preaches then you need to keep your haze thinner and less saturated.  If a little haze is ok, you can saturate the air significantly during worship. Then it will thin out some during the message.  Generally it sits thin on the ground and works it&#;s way up so you end up still seeing some haze up higher near the lights.
  2. Where are your lights aimed?
    If your lighting is all aimed toward the stage, you only really need to haze the stage area and slightly in front.  If you are aiming lights out away from the stage toward the audience or out towards the ceiling, those beams are coming off stage which means you&#;ll want your haze to come off stage too.  The more distance you want to cover with your lights, the more haze you&#;ll need to use and the more saturated you&#;ll likely need the haze to be.
  3. The look&#;do you want to see beams from ceiling to floor or just part of the way?
    I have seen many churches use just a little bit of haze in their services and you can see it show the beams for a while until you get closer to the stage.  This looks nice and will be perfect for many churches.  Others want to see the beam until the light hits its target.  For that you will need your haze thicker.  You need to play with your thickness here to see what gives you the look you want.  Side note: When lighting with haze, the tighter and more focused the beam, the better it will show.  Zooming out and throwing it out of focus will not give you defined beams.  Also, once beams start overlapping you will lose some of the effect too. Quantity of light doesn&#;t necessarily mean quality when trying to paint the air with light.

Answer these three questions and I think you&#;ll be able to easily answer how much haze you need.  As always, please add comments, thoughts, or questions below.

If you want to learn more, please visit our website Parties Haze Machine.