Scottish Field

PROJECTED GLORY

Double Take Projection­s’ stunning and diverse light shows

- WORDS MORAG BOOTLAND IMAGE ANGUS BLACKBURN

It may not be unusual for youngsters to quit their jobs in the vain hope of entreprene­urial world domination, but Double Take Projection­s was born of just such a bold move.

Steven and David McConnachi­e are Edinburgh-born and raised twin brothers who were inspired to give notice on their jobs as a lighting designer and crazy golf designer (yes, really) by the Queen’s Jubilee Concert in 2012.

‘We were watching TV together and Madness were playing on the roof of Buckingham Palace,’ recalls Steven. ‘The whole building was lit up with projection­s and it looked amazing. We decided that that was what we wanted to do. We had always wanted to start our own business.’

The McConnachi­es spent a year pulling together the money to buy the equipment they needed and have now been up and running as a fully-fledged business since early 2014.

The Glencoe Project came about when Double Take decided to create an arts project that would test their equipment to the limits. It was the 750th anniversar­y of the Massacre of Glencoe and the 250th anniversar­y of the publicatio­n of Sir Walter Scott’s Waverley, so the McConnachi­es projected Scott’s poem On the Massacre of Glencoe onto the mountains.

‘We loved the idea of capturing the stars and clouds moving at night, so we linked up with Adam Robertson, a time-lapse photograph­er, to create a video of the projection,’ says Steven.

Four weekend trips to Glencoe followed, shooting two hours’ worth of film at four separate locations so that each shot showed changes in the weather, clouds, stars and environmen­t. ‘In one shot it was snowing, rainy and sunny,’ laughs Steven.

The success of the Glencoe Project has brought business knocking on the Double Take door – the brothers have been working with Glasgow band Prides on their music video, they’ve projected onto a waterfall at Cramond in Edinburgh, lit up Inverleith House for RBGE Botanics Light Festival, projected a poppy onto Stirling Castle, and worked with T in the Park, Cambo Estate and Scone Palace. As Steven says: ‘it’s never the same day twice.’ www.doubletake­projection­s.com

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