CarpeDiem Evènement uses Digital Projection laser projectors to create virtual studio

CarpeDiem Evènement uses Digital Projection laser projectors to create virtual studio
Event staging company CarpeDiem Evènement has been setting the stage for a new virtual recording studio, Studio 321, with the help of Digital Projection M-Vision Laser projectors, in the French Alps.

 
The studio features a main virtual production studio space for recording and an adjoining 40-sq m production office. In the main virtual production area is a 24m x 4m white cyclorama wall with a 90-degree rounded floor angle, as well as a white floor covering , allowing for the recording of small and large productions, from photo shoots and company presentations to cinematic video productions. Studio 321 turned the L-shaped cyclorama into a large canvas video projection screen.
 
Studio 321’s goal was to be versatile, which is why the company opted for video projection technology from Digital Projection instead of LED. Andréas Vion-Endresen, CarpeDiem project manager and director of Studio 321, said: “Among other things we host photo shoots, which is why we needed a uniformly white surface everywhere to minimise shadows. This simply isn’t possible with an LED screen in the background.”


 
 
The studio needed a total of four video projectors and CarpeDiem Evènement relied on two 1-Chip DLP Digital Projection M-Vision Laser 21000 projectors, whose 21,000 lumens of brightness and WUXGA resolution would ensure an immersive and captivating experience for both live and recorded events with the addition of ColorBoost+Red laser technology to these projectors
 
The four M-Vision Lasers projector edge blend content on the 24m long screen rigged to the ceiling, using HDBaseT network connection. The company opted for Vioso 6 automatic re-calibration technology, making the studio operational within an hour. In the background is a Vioso 6 media server in a custom rack-mounted PC couple with a Datapath 2xHDMI 4K 4:4:4 capture card. A TouchDesigner platform manages sources and provides access to a touch-based graphical remote control for studio to use, outputting signals to the M-Vision laser projectors using Vioso calibration technology. Twelve Martin MAC Aura fixed lighting fixtures, four Yamaha VXC8 ceiling speakers, one Yamaha MTX3 audio matric and eight-channel Yamaha XMV amplifier complete the set-up.