Lights, Perspectives & Creative Sparks – A Day in Düsseldorf

Lights, Perspectives & Creative Sparks – A Day in Düsseldorf
Last week, I had the chance to join the Lighting Workshop with the Filmdudes in Düsseldorf – and what a day it was. Between the reflections of Frank Gehry’s architecture, deep conversations about filmmaking, and some seriously good food, I walked away with more than just technical insights. It was one of those days that remind you why you fell in love with visual storytelling in the first place.
The Setting: Architecture, Atmosphere, and Good Energy
Düsseldorf has this unique way of mixing modernity with texture. Around the Gehry buildings, everything feels alive – curved steel, bold lines, and the kind of light that constantly changes your perspective. It’s the perfect environment to talk about illumination and creative composition.
In between sessions, we explored how different light setups affect tone and emotion. The Filmdudes shared their experience from commercial and narrative sets, showing us that great lighting is rarely about the gear – it’s about the intention. It’s about knowing what story you want the light to tell.
And of course, we had to capture the moment: Samu stepping in front of one of Frank Gehry’s iconic façades, striking his best pose like a true natural. The man knows how to use light and architecture to his advantage – best pose, best light, best energy. 📸


What the Workshop Taught Me
Every creative event like this leaves you with a mix of technical notes and intangible inspiration. Here are a few of the things that really stuck with me:
💡 1. Light Is Storytelling
Light isn’t just a tool to make an image visible – it’s part of the narrative language. Every setup communicates something: warmth, tension, intimacy, distance. During the workshop, we played with key lights, practicals, and bounce setups, and it was fascinating to see how subtle shifts completely changed the emotion of a frame.
It’s easy to get lost in LUTs, exposure ratios, and gear talk (and don’t get me wrong – that stuff’s fun). But when you step back, you realize light is emotion. It defines how an audience feels before they even realize why.
🎥 2. Technique Only Works When the Team Does
Great lighting doesn’t happen in isolation. It’s the result of a crew that communicates, trusts, and works toward the same vision.
One of the best moments of the workshop was when we all tried to recreate a complex lighting mood together. Everyone had different approaches – some more technical, others intuitive – but the magic happened when we merged those perspectives. Suddenly, it wasn’t about who had the best idea; it was about how to make all those ideas serve the scene.
That’s what filmmaking really is: a conversation in light, shadow, and timing. And it only works when egos take a back seat to collaboration.
⚡ 3. Growth Comes from Asking (and Listening)
One of the underrated superpowers in filmmaking – or any creative field, really – is curiosity. The best insights of the day didn’t come from the scheduled topics, but from spontaneous questions, side conversations, and even small mistakes that led to discussion.
Sometimes we hold back because we don’t want to ask something “basic.” But honestly, every great DP, gaffer, or director I’ve met stays a student. They keep asking, experimenting, and learning from others. That openness is what keeps the craft alive.


The People Make the Difference
Beyond all the techniques and gear talk, what really made the workshop stand out was the people. There’s something special about being surrounded by filmmakers who genuinely want to share what they know – not compete, not posture, but connect.
We swapped stories about projects that went sideways, laughed about impossible client requests, and celebrated the small wins that often go unnoticed. That kind of environment fills you up with motivation to get back on set and create something new.
And that’s maybe the biggest takeaway: in an industry that can sometimes feel fragmented, events like this bring back the community aspect. The reminder that we’re all figuring it out, one setup, one frame, one conversation at a time.
Final Thoughts
By the end of the day, I left with tired feet, a full notebook, and a head buzzing with ideas. It wasn’t just about lighting ratios or diffusion techniques – it was about mindset. About seeing light as language, teamwork as the foundation, and curiosity as the engine that drives growth.
If you ever get the chance to attend a workshop like this – do it. Not just for the skills, but for the people you’ll meet and the perspectives you’ll gain. Because sometimes, a single day of shared creativity can recharge your whole outlook.
Let’s Keep the Conversation Going
To everyone working in film, lighting, or visual storytelling: how do you keep your creative spark alive? What’s one lesson or “aha moment” that changed the way you work on set or behind the camera?
Drop your thoughts below – I’d love to hear how others in our field stay inspired, especially when the everyday grind kicks in.
Here’s to more light, more stories, and more shared inspiration. 🎬✨
Camera: Fujifilm X-H2s
Lens: Fujinon several lenses
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Location: Switzerland
I'm a freelance Filmmaker in Zurich, looking forward to meeting you here on HIVE and explore visual Art.
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