Starlite Becomes an Official Creamsource Dealer

Starlite Becomes an Official Creamsource Dealer

Starlite Becomes an Official Creamsource Dealer 

 

At Starlite, growth is the result of thoughtful partnerships, strategic investments, and a continued focus on giving our clients the best tools available. We’re proud to announce that Starlite is now an official Creamsource dealer. This means expanding our professional lighting portfolio with one of the most respected names in cinematic LED lighting.

This new dealership marks an important step in Starlite’s upward growth as a company. We’re excited to strengthen our ability to serve clients across all verticals while reinforcing our role as a consistent, one-stop shop for professional lighting solutions.

Expanding Starlite’s Professional Lighting Solutions

As lighting technology evolves, so do the expectations of our clients. From corporate environments and live events to broadcast, film, and education, today’s projects demand lighting that delivers accuracy, reliability, and flexibility without compromise.

By adding Creamsource to our lineup, Starlite expands the range of high-performance LED fixtures we can specify, support, and deliver. Which means ensuring our clients have access to proven tools that perform in real-world conditions.

Why Creamsource Is a Natural Fit for Starlite and Our Clients

Creamsource’s approach mirrors Starlite’s own philosophy: design solutions around how professionals actually work. Their fixtures are engineered with input from cinematographers, gaffers, and rental partners, resulting in products that balance cutting-edge technology with practical usability.

For our clients, this means new lighting options that integrate seamlessly with existing systems and workflows—backed by the same trusted Starlite team you already rely on for guidance, service, and support.

One Trusted Partner for Lighting Across Every Vertical

Starlite serves a wide range of industries, each with unique requirements, but all benefit from dependable, color-accurate lighting. As an official Creamsource dealer, we’re able to support projects across:

 

  • Film and broadcast 

  • Corporate AV and branded environments 

  • Live events and experiential productions 

  • Education, auditoriums, and performance spaces

With this expanded offering, our clients can continue working with one partner, one relationship, and one source for professional lighting—simplifying planning, procurement, and long-term support.

Creamsource: A Proven Legacy of Cinematic LED Innovation

Creamsource’s reputation was built long before LED lighting became industry standard. The company traces its origins back to 2004, when it designed and built one of the first large-scale, high-power LED installations used in feature film production.

Developed for George Miller’s Happy Feet, this groundbreaking system delivered 6kW of reliable LED light for motion capture—setting the stage for Creamsource’s long-standing role as an innovator in professional lighting.

 

From Early LED Breakthroughs to Today’s Advanced Fixtures

Over the years, Creamsource has consistently pushed LED lighting forward:

  • 2006: Developed bespoke LED ring lights for cinematographers seeking fixtures built to withstand demanding sets  
  • 2009: Designed custom LED equipment for productions like X-Men Origins: Wolverine and released the Doppio 2’ x 1’ LED Panel, redefining expectations for LED performance  
  • 2012: Expanded the lineup with the Mini 1’ x 1’ Panel, delivering the same rugged reliability in a compact form  
  • 2014: Introduced the Creamsource Sky, a powerful 1200W, five-color LED system operating completely silent and fan-free  
  • 2016: Launched third-generation LED engines, upgrading Doppio and Mini fixtures to “+” specifications with improved CRI and TLCI  

 

TV & Film

Today, Creamsource fixtures are trusted on productions including House of the Dragon, Dune: Part Two, Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning, Foundation and many more.

 

 

Designed for the Real World: Creamsource’s Product Philosophy

What sets Creamsource apart is its commitment to solving real on-set challenges. Their fixtures are designed to be durable, intuitive, and dependable—built not just to look impressive on spec sheets, but to perform day after day in demanding environments.

This philosophy aligns perfectly with Starlite’s focus on recommending products we trust, use, and can confidently support long after installation or delivery.

Creamsource Vortex24

Vortex24

Creamsource Vortex8

Vortex8

Creamsource Vortex24

SpaceX

Creamsource’s Next Chapter: Leadership, Growth, and Innovation

Creamsource is also entering an exciting new phase of growth with the appointment of Markus Zeiler in December of 2025 as Group Managing Director. Formerly CEO of ARRI, Markus brings decades of experience in LED development, global operations, and lighting leadership—having helped guide the industry-wide transition to LED technology.

With Markus overseeing operational growth, founders Tama Berkeljon and Sasha Marks are able to focus even more deeply on R&D and future product innovation. This leadership structure positions Creamsource to scale while staying grounded in the needs of working professionals.

 

What This Means for Starlite Clients

For our clients, becoming a Creamsource dealer means more options, more consistency, and more confidence in your lighting solutions. Whether you’re planning a production, upgrading a space, or designing a new system, Starlite can now deliver an even broader range of professional-grade lighting. On top of it all it’s supported by a team that understands your goals from start to finish.

We’re excited to welcome Creamsource into the Starlite family and look forward to putting these powerful tools to work for you.

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Product Spotlight: Ayrton Veloce Profile

Product Spotlight: Ayrton Veloce Profile

Built for the Elements, Designed for Impact

We’re thrilled to spotlight one of the newest additions to our growing rental inventory: the Ayrton Veloce Profile. This ultra-equipped fixture from Ayrton’s ULTIMATE range represents the latest evolution in outdoor-ready, high-output lighting—and we couldn’t be more excited to offer it to our clients.

Whether you’re planning a large-scale concert tour, an outdoor festival, or a high-end corporate production, the Veloce Profile is engineered to meet the toughest demands with unmatched performance.

Rugged. Refined. Ready for Anything.

The Veloce Profile doesn’t just raise the bar—it redefines it. With a sleek, lightweight design (just shy of 90 lbs.) and IP65-rated weather protection, this fixture is built for the rigors of outdoor use in all environments. Rain or shine, you can count on the Veloce to deliver consistent, professional-quality output every time.

The Veloce Profile produces a staggering 43,000 lumens. That’s light you can trust to cut through even the most complex outdoor scenes—from foggy festival fields to massive stadium stages.

View the full spec sheet

Unmatched Versatility for Touring and Festivals

The Veloce Profile’s flexibility makes it a dream for designers and rental clients alike. With a deep feature set that enables both subtle ambiance and bold spectacle, you’ll be ready for anything the show calls for. Whether you’re shaping tight beams or creating massive textures, the Veloce delivers with precision.

Touring and Festivals
Touring and Festivals
Touring and Festivals

Key features include:

 

  • IP65 rated

  • 43,000 lumens

  • 13:1 zoom ratio

  • Zoom aperture: 4° to 52°

  • CMY color mixing system

  • Ultra-precise framing module

  • Dual rotating and indexable prisms

  • Dual rotating gobo wheels with seven high-precision glass gobos

  • Focusable animation wheel with continuous rotation in both directions

  • Electronic dimming for smooth light adjustment

Quiet, Smart, and Camera-Ready

Its flicker-free source management makes it an excellent option for broadcast, live streaming, and recording environments where visual clarity and audio sensitivity matter.

 

PRODUCT SPOTLIGHT - Veloce Profile

Despite its power, the Veloce Profile is whisper-quiet thanks to:

  • An advanced sealed liquid cooling system

     

  • IP68-rated variable-speed fans

     

  • User-selectable modes, including Super Silent Mode

Built for the Road. Backed by Ayrton. Available from Starlite.

At Starlite, we invest in gear that empowers creativity. Ayrton fixtures have consistently impressed us with their performance, innovation, and road-tested durability. The addition of the Veloce Profile reflects our continued commitment to offering the best tools to our clients.

→ Whether you’re a lighting designer pushing creative boundaries or a production manager planning the next big tour, the Veloce Profile belongs in your rig.

Now in Stock—Rent the Veloce Profile Today

Ready to add the Veloce Profile to your next event, project or tour? Contact our rental team, and let’s make it happen.

Expert customer support from our in-house team and a full range of accessories and compatible gear

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Rigging Safety and Responsibility: Better Safe Than Surprised

Rigging Safety and Responsibility: Better Safe Than Surprised

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By Brandon Creel ETCP, CTS-D, Former Starlite Director of Engineering

When you’re outside your worship space, grab a pen and paper and make a list of everything you can think of that’s hanging over head. Then walk into the sanctuary and look up. Did you miss anything? Odds are you did. And odds are even greater you’re not sure that everything up there is hanging safely.

What is hanging over head at your church? Do you know without looking? From outside the sanctuary, grab a pen and paper and make a list of everything you can think of. Now, walk into the sanctuary and look up. Did you miss anything? Speakers, video displays, light fixtures, chandeliers, trusses, acoustical clouds, suspended ceiling, curtains, pipe grid, pipe battens, chain hoists, cameras, scenic elements, and a cross are some of the items you might see. You probably have more than you realized. Churches of any size are likely to have at least a half dozen of these items. Now I ask, how are these items hanging? Safely? If so, how do you know?

The “Guys”

Every church has a sound guy, at least one. He or she mixes the audio at every service, funeral, wedding, or event. The sound guy typically is not alone and next to him is the video guy, who switches and shades cameras, puts up the song lyrics on the screen, or cues a video.

Another position is the lighting guy, a position of which the congregation is sometimes not even aware. He or she brings up the lights on stage, cross fades to change the focus over to the choir, then the band, and then highlights the preacher. The lighting guy uses a console or software that the congregation has never heard of and every once in a while, someone will ask them to turn down the music … because it is too loud.

Lighting

Satire aside, we should agree that there is much that goes into the technical side of a church service. Regarding lighting, how did those lights get there anyway? Someone climbed up the ladder, clamped a fixture to the pipe, plugged in power/control and then focused it. There was much thought that went into where to put the light, what type of light, what the wattage of the light is, what circuit to connect it to, and what type power is required (voltage, dimmed, constant). And multiply this by the number of fixtures in the rig. It could be a few, or a few hundred.

Whatever the size of the church or the lighting system, the users must be knowledgeable, trained, and qualified to do whatever work they are tasked with. Or minimally, under the direct supervision of someone who is. How can church management ensure this is the case? Certification is one method that is working well in our industry.

ESTA & ETCP

Entertainment Services and Technology Association (ESTA) is a non-profit trade association based in North America. It runs the Technical Standards Program, which creates, develops, and maintains the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) standards for our entertainment technology industry. ESTA is the co-organizer of the now annual New World Rigging Symposium – a conference dedicated to entertainment rigging. In addition, the group administers the Entertainment Technician Certification Program (ETCP).

ETCP has been running for almost 15 years and offers four certifications that are recognized industry-wide: Rigger – Theatre, Rigger – Arena, Entertainment Electrician, and Portable Power Distribution Technician. These certifications are voluntary, and ETCP is the nongovernmental organization that grants recognition to an individual who has demonstrated mastery in a discipline. In other words, certification is a highly credible and reputable achievement where the technician has proven his or her capabilities.

Going back to church management, requiring technicians, or at least supervisors, to be certified is strongly encouraged. Knowing that certified personnel are responsible for the church’s systems, including safety, should help mitigate risk.

Going back to church management, requiring technicians, or at least supervisors, to be certified is strongly encouraged.

Codes

Electricity is dangerous (can be life threatening) but, in an installed system in the United States, we have the National Electric Code (NEC). In short, the Code is here to protect us all. Engineers design to (minimally) meet the Code, contractors install to meet the Code, and authorities having jurisdiction inspect to the Code. For example, the Code requires over-current protection like circuit breakers to prevent overloading of the wiring and receptacle. It specifies what type and size of wire to use in a given application and arc flash labeling of panels, which inform the worker what level of personal protection equipment (PPE) they must have on in order to open or work on the panel.

Unfortunately, we have no such code for rigging. We have voluntary national standards and structural engineers, like the one that designed the building’s structure. Engineers can tell us the capacity of the beams, joists, walls, floors, and roof, which we need to know in order to proceed with rigging.

Rigging

Rigging is a broad but specialized topic and starts with the building structure. These structures are unique and vary in strength, material, construction, and size. The most common structures are joists (steel or wood), purlins, glued laminated (glulam) timber, and steel beams. Rigging systems are complex and vary depending on application. Some examples include dead-hung, pipe grid, counterweight, clew-winch, motorized hoists (chain or wire rope). Rigging has to be coordinated carefully with the ceiling structure, duct work, architectural lighting, sprinklers, plumbing, basketball nets, and acoustical ceilings. When rigging from above is not an option, we turn to floor-mounted structures, which may be scenic only or structural to support audio, video and lighting.

Is your system rated? Is the capacity known? When was the last time the system was inspected? You should know these answers! The rigger’s job is to keep everything and everyone safe. Numerous manufacturers, guidelines, and standards all tell us that we need to have our systems inspected (at least) annually and have a written report to document the deficiencies. Having an on-staff ETCP rigger is a great place to start with implementing and/or facilitating inspections, repairs, and maintenance. All of which should be documented with logs kept on file. If you do not have enough rigging or electrical work to keep certified personnel on staff, you can search for a technician, using the search function on the ETCP website: http://etcp.esta.org/search.

Final Words

Just about every church is unique. It has its own personality and character. The size, shape, and finishes all contribute to define its individuality. From large open spaces to small intimate ones, tech-heavy to minimalistic, all have some form of audio visual and lighting aspect. Management should share concerns about safety of the building, systems, and their people. Lighting and rigging are dangerous and can be fatal, if improperly used, which is why the users must be knowledgeable, trained, and qualified–or better yet–certified.

 

What certifications apply to churches?

  • ETCP Entertainment Electrician, includes Portable Power Distribution Technician and lighting controls, fixtures, and special effects.
  • ETCP Portable Power Distribution Technician, subset of the Entertainment Electrician focusing on portable power cabling
  • ETCP Rigger – Arena, everything rigging unless your venue has counterweight rigging
  • ETCP Rigger – Theatre, emphasis on counterweight rigging in a proscenium venue

Resources

This article was originally published online by Church Production™ on November 26, 2018.