UltraShows!
Want to share your sequences with others or looking for sequences so you can build that over-the-top show using your lights and special effects? Think www.UltraShows.com
PlanetChristmas
We're thinking Christmas every day of the year! Join us and share the fun.

The Carson Williams Video
This article is from the May 2009 edition of PlanetChristmas Magazine
I'm
Carson Williams. When I sat down to write this column, I was trying to put
everything that happened in perspective. I went from decorating my house for
fun to making a living being an animation lighting professional very
quickly. After thinking about my Internet video, the newspapers and press,
the notoriety and everything else that happened; I realized that I happened
to upload the right video, at the right time. I was lucky. That was just my
start but there are many stories of people taking their hobby to the next
level. I will try and quickly give you the Carson Williams to Consar Lights
story.
The video I’m talking about was of my house from the
2004 Christmas season. I uploaded it
in February 2005 to the PlanetChristmas website and asked for comments in
the PlanetChristmas forums. It was viewed by several members saying nice
things but that was the most activity. In November everything changed. Someone found my video and e-mailed the link to a buddy who e-mailed
to another and so on. Somehow CNN found the link and published the address
of the video still located on PlanetChristmas.com. Chuck Smith told me the PlanetChristmas.com web server was in the
corner of his office at work and when my video was referenced by CNN his
whole business came to a halt because no one could use the Internet to get
anything out. In November 2005,
Youtube.com had just started, so the video ended up there and everyone kept
emailing the link to others. The video went viral about November 21, 2005
and my name became synonymous with Christmas lights.
![]() |
| Go ahead and click the
picture above to see the original video as it was posted on PlanetChristmas. |
The first thoughts of doing animation professionally
hit me around December 15 when the Vice President of Marketing for
After serious discussions with my wife, I decided to
pursue the opportunity at the
With the decision to go pro made, I was ready to hang
some lights and make them blink. I met with Jane in January 2006 and within
ten minutes of hearing her vision for the mall, I realized I was in way over
my head. I told her the truth. I said
I knew I could make a great animated show, but I would need to find some
expertise to create and build a lighting show of this magnitude. Luckily for
me and my new business, she had a person in mind who had created holiday
displays for her and linked me with John Carter of Parker 3D. A new partnership was born. I have worked with Parker 3D for three
years and have been able to take my animation skills, pair them with John’s
grandiose ideas and create one-of-a-kind shows for large venues across the
Consar Lights now existed and needed more business so
my next opportunity came at Oglebay Park Resort in
That was the just first year of being an animation
lighting professional. I started out
slow and getting my feet wet. I was able to keep my day job during the
entire season by using up my vacation days, but I was tired after the season
ended. When January 2007 rolled around I started looking for new
opportunities for the upcoming season. The holiday light profession is not
just around Christmas. The design of a quality light show takes months, so
you need to research opportunities, make cold calls and create quotes all
year long.
I was lucky and was given an extraordinary chance to
become an animation lighting professional. I went from home decorator to
professional in different directions. I am partnering with a Parker3D for
the large animation jobs and using my expertise and local staff for the
smaller jobs. I make sure my friends know I am always looking for an
opportunity or a job. In an effort to keep Consar Lights going, I spend a
lot of the year thinking about Christmas lights but it has been worth it.
In my next column I can go over some skills needed to
be an animation lighting professional from negotiations to training.










