Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Halloween Party 2014: It Lands!

Another year, another great Halloween party

We started off with the glowing invitations here.

Unfortunately, the party décor - glowing items against a totally dark backdrop - was extremely hard to photograph, but you'll have to trust me, everything looked great.

We trained three RGB DMX lights on the front of the house that lit up the entire façade with slowly "breathing" pulses of blue and green light.


Then in the back yard, guests entered Dev's science lab, complete with beakers full of glowing liquids, an analog computer, and an oscilloscope, and a real robot Dev built himself, along with an awesome wall of equations that Lilli drew for us.






On the patio, in the lit-up section of the yard, we also set up Dev's cabinet arcade game Space Duel, which was a big hit.
 
Dev as The Scientist
In the dark area we set up a bar with retro sci-fi posters framed in black-light-reactive tape, glow-in-the-dark stars, twinkling UFOs, and even a glowing, black-light-reactive punch Dev created for the occasion.  We hung four large black lights over the bar area.




Dev's glowing cocktail


For party favors we had glow sticks (we bought 300) and "atomic ray guns" - assorted retro-styled water guns.

The baskets glowed under black light.

 

Out on the lawn we projected a great compilation of old retro sci-fi movie trailers (1, 2, 3, and 4 - check them out, they are a lot of fun to watch).  We also had the trailers playing on the TV in the back room in case people wanted to head inside to warm up.


But the centerpiece was definitely the crashed UFO.



 
Lilli and I built the body of the UFO out of two beach umbrellas covered in sheets of aluminum foil, then ringed with LED rope lights.  The smaller round lights on top are LEDs tucked into glow-in-the-dark ping pong balls cut in half.  The capsule on top is a semi-translucent plastic serving bowl with two LED black light strobe lights inside.

Underneath the UFO Dev hid some speakers to play UFO sound effects, a strobe light, and our retrofitted fog machine*.  We also hid some more LEDs under the saucer to better illuminate the fog.



Dev testing out the fog machine
(The video below doesn't do a good job of capturing the sounds, but you can here them here: 1, 2, 3, 4).

Lilli spent the whole week ahead of the party visiting us and she was a tremendous help with everything from entertaining the kids to creating glow-in-the-dark hula hoop spheres.


James and Melissa also came by the night before the party and helped us program the UFO and spray paint bowls and baskets with black-light-reactive paint.

We had a slightly smaller turn-out this year (just under 80 adults and a few kids), but we also had some really great costumes.




Black light group shot

This is what everybody actually looked like.

Pink hair twins
 








Then after the last guest went home at around 3am, I went to bed already excited about the absolutely awesome ideas I have for Halloween 2015 . . .

* Inexpensive fog machines never look very good because a) they just make a thin puff of fog that immediately dissipates, and b) you have to manually push a button each time you want it to go off.  But by passing the "fog" through a cooler full of ice you can cool if off, resulting in thick, low, slow-rolling fog, then put it all on a timer, remote control, or motion sensor so you don't have to stand next to the machine all night to get it to operate.

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