Data Sheet
38
SLIDE PROJECTIONS FOR STUNNING EFFECTS AND 
TEACHING LIGHTING SETUPS FOR VIRTUAL STUDIOS
The background will always appear in focus when using cameras 
with a small sensor and short focal length lens. Sometimes the effect 
of a greater separation or space can be achieved by throwing the 
projected background out of focus – easily done by defocusing the 
projection lens on our imager.
If further refinement of such effects is wanted, e.g. on a landscape 
setting, this is possible (by virtue of our moving image plane in the 
For classic dedolight
DP3 imager/projection attachment 
Use with DLH4, DLHM4-300 
and DLH200DT lights for 
gobo and slide projection.
Choice of projection lenses: 
50, 60, 85, 150 and 185 mm, as well as 
two zoom lenses 70   -120 mm and 85  -150 mm.
With the slide holding attachments which are available for all 
series of dedolight, slides can be projected. 
Usually this wants to be done from an angle, so that the person in 
front of such a projection will not be touched by the light from the 
slide projection. This can be done from an angle of 45° or 30°.
Maintaining equal focus from left to right can be achieved by 
the adjustment of the image plane in our projection devices 
(left-right as well as up-down).
For light heads of Series 400
For DLH400DT, DLH650 and also the new DLED9.1, 90 W light you 
can use DP400 imager / projection attachment with slide projection 
For our larger lights
The DP400 imager/projection attachment in combination with a 
DP1200CON or DP1200CON-WA condenser module may be used 
with the DLH1200 metal halide light head as well as the DLED12.1 
focusing LED light head.
DP1200CON - Standard 
For lenses 150  - 230 mm focal length (also possible with 100 mm)
DP1200CON-WA – Use for wide-angle projection 
lenses 70  -100 mm (150 mm is also possible)
DP3
DP400-SHA
slide projection out of focus
slide projection in focus
imager) so that the foreground (e.g. the lower part of the image) 
can be kept in focus, whilst half or two-thirds of the upper image on 
the projected background can drift out of focus, again creating the 
illusion of greater depth.
This is also a subject which we will describe in one of our future videos, 
to show how easy such effects can be achieved.










