[SML] Low-Lying Fog

John Taylor jt at techie.com
Wed Apr 10 16:23:26 UTC 2019


Could not make it this year but when USITT was in St Louis there was a
company I think that had Frog in there name. They had some awesome
machines, one did use regular ice cubes, the other had a small chiller
built in. They were both extremely good machines. Have a link somewhere,
headed to tech, will check later to see if I still have it.

JT

On 4/10/2019 10:48 AM, Steven Hood via Stagecraft wrote:
> Was one of them Look Solutions? They make some nice stuff (way out of
> my budget, though)...
> Steven R Hood
>
> On April 10, 2019 7:50:32 AM "Jeffrey E. Salzberg via Stagecraft"
> <stagecraft at theatrical.net> wrote:
>
>> If Chauvet had it there, I didn't see it.  The two I saw were brands
>> unfamiliar to me.  Both looked pretty good, though.
>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> *Jeffrey E. Salzberg, Lighting Designer*<http://www.jeffsalzberg.com>
>> 917/238-7430
>>
>> Online Portfolio: http://www.jeffsalzberg.com
>> Stage Lighting for Students: http://www.stagelightingprimer.com
>> Facebook: Lighting Design by Jeffrey E. Salzberg
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>>
>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> On 4/10/2019 9:55 AM, gbierly--- via Stagecraft wrote:
>>>> On Apr 10, 2019, at 9:11 AM, Jeffrey E. Salzberg via Stagecraft<stagecraft at theatrical.net>  wrote:
>>>>
>>>> At USITT, I saw two water-based, low-lying fog machines that required neither dry ice nor chillers.  I very carefully wrote down the info on a piece of paper… which is around here somewhere.
>>>>
>>>> Anyone remember what they were?
>>> While I didn’t attend USITT my guess is one of them was Chauvet’s Cumulus.  I have been waiting to see one firsthand to see how it looks.  Your thoughts from what you saw?
>>>
>>> Greg Bierly
>>>
>>>
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