Why is Translucent background wall Better?

28 Oct.,2024

 

Transparent LED Wall-A Good Choice For Concert & Stage!

High transparency: Transparent LED displays have high light transmittance, usually between 50% and 90%.

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This allows it to play video content while the audience is still able to see the set, actors or other stage elements behind the screen.

Modular splicing: Transparent LED displays are usually composed of multiple modular units.

It can be flexibly spliced &#;&#;into different sizes and shapes according to stage needs, adapting to various creative designs and stage design needs.

Energy saving and environmental protection: LED technology is relatively energy-saving, and transparent LED displays are no exception.

They can effectively reduce energy consumption in large-scale use.

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Multifunctional applications: In addition to displaying video and image content, transparent LED displays can also be integrated with stage lighting, sound effects and other multimedia equipment.

Achieve interactive and synchronized effects to enhance the overall visual impact of the performance

Transparent Backgrounds are Beautiful! - CHRIS MILES

This experience of getting my background too dark made me think of a blog entry I had been intending to write about the use of transparent layers of paint. Using transparent paint for backgrounds, or more accurately, for the &#;underpainting&#;, or the first layer of paint, is a longstanding tradition in painting, particularly before the impressionists. The impressionists started a new style of using thick paint over the entire surface, often in just one thick layer. But before the impressionists, oil painters tended to paint in thin layers, building up the layers slowly, and, as I wrote, leaving some of the first transparent layers showing. I generally work in this old, pre-impressionist technique. 

You can see this use of transparent painting very well in Rembrandt paintings. His shadows are usually transparent brown. Then the lights are painted with opaque paint. Having the white canvas shine through the transparent paint creates a very beautiful, luminous,  stain glass- like effect, and this beauty, I assume, is why it became a traditional technique. And it saved paint, probably important back in the days when pigments were expensive and artists had to prepare and make their own paint.

Two other painters who used beautiful under paintings were Pieter Bruegel and Hieronymus Bosch. In this detail of a Hieronymus Bosch painting below, the first layer of paint was the the lower whitish sky, which is a transparent layer. This probably covered the whole surface. Then he gradated the blue in at the top, also with transparent paint. He then painted the buildings on the horizon with a paint color from the sky. Then at some point he added another mostly transparent layer to create the color of the yellow hills in the foreground. Continuing to work mostly transparently, he now built up all the details. At the end he used opaque paint for the final details, such as the blades of the windmill and the leaves of the trees. Since these details are light over dark, only opaque paint would work. Except for these few opaque details, the whole painting is almost like a watercolor painting done with oils, in the sense that the whole painting mostly transparent paint. 

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