By now, I am sure you have seen light painting and probably done a little research and reading up on it. Maybe you have experimented with it. As you do start experimenting you are going to need some tools. A painter uses brushes and a light painter is no different. At this point no company is making any tools specific to this art so light painters must be crafty and make their own. In this article I will tell you how to make a very simple and effective spray can light tool.
Why a spray can? I guess the main reason is this shape is easy to use. It fits nicely in the hand and functions in familiar way to real spray cans making them effective. If you have any experience
To make the spray can you will need a plastic bottle, a string of battery operated LED lights and a pressure switch. I used a 500ml plastic drink bottle. In Japan almost everything is sold in these bottles. I hope you are able to find one in your country. The lights can actually be any battery operated light as long as there is enough wire to solder in a pressure switch. This ultimately will be the brush that your spray can will be. Extra wire can easily be soldered in. A pressure switch is a switch that is ‘on’ when pushed and ‘off’ when released. An electrical switch that works just like a spray can or airbrush would.
Now to make the spray can… First, you must solder in the pressure switch at least a few centimeters from the lights. The lights will stick out the side near the top of the bottle and the switch will go in the cap so there must be enough wire between them for them to be positioned like this. A pressure switch has no positive or negative side and can be soldered in anywhere. If you do not have a soldering iron then just make the connections with tape. Make a hole in the bottle where you want the lights to come out. I made mine in a line to give me a calligraphy style brush. The opening was big enough for me to stuff my lights inside the bottle through this hole. Put some double sided tape on the battery pack so it would stick to the side of the bottle and not rattle around. Make a hole in the lid and for the switch. The switch I used was meant to be fastened through a hole. Then put the lid on and you are done. Well, almost done…
What you should have is a functioning spray can light. The only problem is this thing looks like crap. The can was a collaboration project with our good friends CFYE.com, who worked together with Fiz-iks, to create a killer label for the can. You need to get your CFYE+Fiz-iks collaboration label and slap it on. Once you have a can with the label on it take a pic of it and send it in to CFYE! who will post it on their blog and get you some exposure! Fiz-iks took the collaboration one step further and went and shot a series of pictures to show the can in action.










SHINOBU
May 18, 2009 at 7:08 pmThank you for inviting me.
I was amazed to see this site.
I’m looking forward to see your wife and son too.
See you next time. Bye-bye.
batmkana
May 18, 2009 at 11:13 pmInsane ingeniousness !
Fiz-iks are avangardists of the light painting and more largely of the street art! Cheer
Upendraya
May 24, 2009 at 5:59 amHey very nice blog!!
jimi
July 21, 2009 at 2:44 amAMAZING GUYS! i’m seriously inspired. I shoot all film so i’ll have a big challenge on my hands but I can’t wait. Do you have any more photos of the these cans? Or how the internal guts are composed? I just need to see it so I can recreate it. Thanks a million! I’ll post my results too.
so good!
xoxo
jimi
SouthernLights
July 27, 2009 at 1:11 pmTrevor, You are truly the Jedi Light Master,
I am mearly your grasshopper. Thank you for all of your influence and information. A true friend in our world.
Thank you
Duane
Jeremy
October 30, 2009 at 3:31 amThis is only a small piece to the millions of possibilities when the world is your canvas and light is your medium. I have to wonder if we’re ever going to exhaust our possibilities. How about yall share how you did the cages for the fiz-iks birds hey?