It's basically an entire Christmas light show, synced with music which is broadcasted on an FM radio station. The main problem is that because few people have access to an FM radio outside of their car, it pretty much causes traffic chaos in that little cul de sac, and the best view requires you to not be in a car.
Apartments are a lot harder because you can't usually drill into the side. I've seen some balconies on apartments in my area with small animations, and one person has a matrix in the window.
But at the end of the day it's the same as house, you just have a much smaller canvas to work with.
You'll want to look up the ESPixelStick to get started if you're in an apartment, it can probably meet all your needs, since you won't be able to do too many lights.
I once had a crazy idea to build an inner frame and my own floor and walls onto those frames, in a room I was renting for a long time. I ended up not doing that, and depending on your situation it might not be allowed to do it (either because of rules from the landlord, or fire safety that you have to consider).
I still think it’s an idea worth considering in some situations though, as long as you are sure it’s compliant with rules from the landlord and fire safety regulations etc.
I don't know about building an entire false frame (what do you do with it when you move? You would lose a ton of interior space. Your ceilings would only be 7 feet, etc).
But I've definitely seen people build a false wall that covered 1/2 of a real wall to make fake builtins over a fake fireplace. But they could take it with them when they left.
Yeah, the idea was to disassemble it and take it with me when I moved out. The inner frame would be assembled using screws, rather than nails and also not using any glue.
It might take several days, or even a couple of weekends if you have busy days during Mondays to Fridays, to disassemble it. And that’s if you originally built the whole thing in one go and kept in mind and made notes of how to disassemble it.
The worst situation is if your lease suddenly ends on short notice and you don’t have time to disassemble it on the time you have left before you have to leave.
Another thing is that even if you disassemble it on time, the dimensions of your frame probably won’t fit well into the next room you rent in a different place. And then you have to do a bunch of cutting and maybe buying even more materials or throwing away some of what you had, or find somewhere to store it or something.
There’s also the possibility that you might accidentally damage the original floor or walls even though you try to be super careful, if you go about constructing such a thing.
These sorts of potential complications are part of the reason that I ended up not actually building such a thing myself so far. Aside from also not having much in terms of extra cash on hand at the time to even go buy the materials I would have needed for it.
The half wall you suggested is far more practical for sure.
Fire safety rules are a good point. Wasn’t thinking about that aspect. But using outdoor compliant lights and hanging from frames outsides could be an option. Guess it would be an interesting start
Maybe one thing you could do if you have large enough windows so people would see: in-door wall projection, e.g. something like this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jtFthRSqRwQ but interior?
There is a street that does this in Alameda (3200 block of Thompson), and I'm told they have a covenant/contract requiring you to overdecorate when you buy a house on that block.
While it is an important holiday for Christians, it’s widely celebrated by non Christians and most of the traditions predate Christianity as European winter celebrations. It includes bits of Germanic Yule and Roman Saturnalia celebrations, both which predate Christianity.
This is mostly pop history, dating back to anti-Catholic propaganda from zealous Puritan reformers who wanted to excise any trace of what they saw as pagan contamination. The bulk of Christmas traditions are distinctly Christian, and very little of Saturnalia in particular was carried over into the new holiday. Perhaps the biggest influence it had was the tradition of communities electing a 'King of Mischief' to preside over festivities -- a practice that hasn't even survived into the modern day!
Of particular note is the Christmas tree, which as far as we can tell originated in the (decidedly non-pagan) 16th century:
"The earliest mention of customs like Christmas trees are actually ascribed to Martin Luther. The story goes that during a winter evening stroll Luther was overcome by the brilliance of the stars in the night sky, painting the background over the evergreen forests. In order to capture that moment Luther cut down and erected a tree in the main hall of their house, covering its branches with lighted candles" (Bruce David Forbes, Christmas, a Candid History, 50).
There's actually a neighborhood, where everyone who lives there is Jewish, and they go all out on lights. Even get the houses networked together so they can do effects across the whole street. They also post a lot of how to videos regarding xlights and stuff
Join us!! It’s the perfect hobby for nerds. It starts with big DIY projects with lots of PVC and zip ties and 3d printing. Then you do a bunch of small electronics with solder and microcontrollers. And then you get to do programming and some basic networking to set it all up.
I got started in Dec 2020 when I couldn’t go anywhere and my show grows every year.
I’ll admit it is a time sink. I’ve probably spent 120+ hours on it (and my wife has contributed 20ish hours as well)
Best place to start is probably some form of "permanent Christmas lights"
You install them along the trim of your house, like you would with traditional lights. You can then use them for all sorts of things. Flag colors for patriotic holidays. Bright pastels for spring. Christmas can be any mix of red green and white, hanukkah can be blue and white, etc
They let you start soft, with something that doesn't need xlights, just a simple controller and the lights, so you get the feel for the hardware side of things, and you canuse them all the time
I wrote a blog post[1] about how I got mine set up. My show this winter isn't very big, consisting of only a spinner (big circular pattern of pixels), megatree (big cone shaped light "tree") and the house lights, but some of my friends in the area go all out with spotlights and moving components and even pyrotechnics
Enjoyed your blog post - some great insights, solid final results and at about the right level of DIY. Could you give a specification for the LED pucks though please? The Aliexpress link is dead.
If you're going to put a dot matrix display of images on your house, just cover it with LCD screens. At some point too much tech just makes it boring and plain.
The backlight bleed of LCDs would look pretty awful at night. Also I’m not sure how others feel about it but to me a DIY LED matrix is way cooler than dropping in a prebuilt screen with HDMI input.
Some people do combine those with their individual pixels. They will also use projection mapping. All three techniques look different and add to the show in different ways.
Buying prebuilt stuff and premade sequences seems like it’d take all the fun out of it, at least for me. I guess this is an area where some people are in it for the goal and others for the journey. I think either is equally valid, but it’s always interesting to see people making different tradeoffs than I’d make.
I mentioned this in my other comment, but the hobby is basically three parts -- big DIY, small electronics, and software/sequencing. Some people really like one or two parts of it. Some people will buy kits and spend all their time making sequences.
Some will spend all their time building and then buying sequences.
I personally end up buying sequences because I run out of time. I've made them before, but they take about 50 hours to make one song. I sadly don't have that kind of time, so I spend all my time making and then shortcut the end so that all the making serves a purpose.
Lots of animated displays in New England: https://www.nelights.org/
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