Period-Style Interview on LED Wall | Virtual Production in Richmond, BC

Some productions demand a visual language that feels ancient and unhurried, a world of stone pavilions, still water, and rustling bamboo. Building that world on location means scouting remote heritage sites, managing weather, securing permits, and hoping the modern world stays out of frame. At Upperland Studio in Richmond, BC, we built that world on our LED wall in a single afternoon, then sat two actors down at a real tea table and let the scene unfold naturally. This is the story of Tea Under a Digital Sky.
The Creative Concept: Blending Physical and Digital
The concept behind this project was to create a period-style interview scene that felt authentic enough for broadcast while being produced entirely indoors. The client needed a cultural content piece, a conversation between two characters in traditional dress, set against a classical East Asian landscape. Think an intimate tea ceremony conversation with the atmosphere of a historical drama.
The key creative insight was that believability in period pieces comes from the interplay between foreground and background. Audiences accept digital backgrounds far more readily when there are tangible, textured, real-world objects anchoring the frame. Our approach was to layer physical set dressing with digital environments, creating a scene that was neither fully practical nor fully virtual, but something more immersive than either alone.
Set Design: Real Props Meet Digital Backdrop
The set design for Tea Under a Digital Sky operated on two levels, and getting the balance right was critical to selling the illusion:
- Physical foreground elements: A solid wooden tea table with ceramic tea wares (teapot, cups, a bamboo tea tray). Live bamboo plants flanking the seating area to create organic texture and natural depth. A low bench with cushions. A folding screen partially visible at frame edge. These objects gave the actors something real to interact with and provided tactile detail that cameras love.
- Digital background on LED wall: A serene pavilion scene rendered in Unreal Engine, featuring traditional architecture with curved rooflines, misty mountains in the distance, and a gently shifting sky. The scene was designed with subtle animation: drifting clouds, faint light shifts, and occasional birds crossing the sky. This micro-movement prevented the background from feeling like a static painting.
- Transition zone: The area where physical props met the LED wall was carefully managed. The bamboo plants were positioned to overlap slightly with the digital foliage on screen, creating a seamless visual blend. This overlap zone is one of the most important details in LED wall production, and it is where many productions fall short.
Production Process: A Single-Day Shoot
The entire production was completed in one day, a testament to the efficiency of LED wall studio production for interview and dialogue content:
- Morning setup (2 hours): The physical set was arranged first. Tea table centered, bamboo placed, sight lines checked through the camera viewfinder. Then the Unreal Engine environment was loaded onto the LED wall and aligned with the physical elements. Fine adjustments were made to the virtual camera position so the pavilion’s architectural lines matched the eyeline of seated actors.
- Wardrobe and makeup (1 hour, concurrent with set adjustment): The two actors were dressed in traditional robes with period-appropriate hair and minimal makeup designed for camera. Wardrobe colours were chosen to complement both the warm wood tones of the tea table and the cool blue-grey palette of the digital landscape.
- Shooting block one, golden-hour atmosphere (2 hours): The first pass was shot with the LED wall displaying a late-afternoon lighting mood: warm, soft, and directional. The conversation was captured in a standard two-camera interview setup plus a wider establishing shot. Because the LED wall provided motivated lighting that matched the on-screen sun position, only one small fill light was needed to lift shadows under the actors’ hats.
- Shooting block two, twilight mood (1.5 hours): Without moving any physical props or relighting, we shifted the Unreal Engine environment to a dusk setting. The sky deepened to violet and indigo. Lanterns in the digital pavilion began to glow. The entire mood of the scene transformed in minutes, giving the client two completely different visual feels from the same setup.
- Wrap (30 minutes): Props struck, data backed up, and the team was out in under eight hours total.
Why LED Walls Excel for Period and Cultural Content
Period pieces and cultural content present unique challenges that LED wall studios solve elegantly. According to the BC Chamber of Commerce, British Columbia’s creative industries are increasingly leveraging virtual production to reduce costs while maintaining high production values. Here is why:
- No location compromise: Finding a visually authentic historical location in Metro Vancouver is difficult and expensive. Heritage sites have strict rules about equipment, lighting, and set modifications. An LED wall lets you design the exact environment your story needs, without compromise.
- Instant time-of-day control: Period scenes often depend on specific lighting moods. The soft light of dawn, the warm glow of lanterns at dusk. On location, you are at the mercy of the sun. On an LED wall, you control the sky.
- Cultural specificity without travel: Need a traditional Japanese garden? A Mughal courtyard? A European castle interior? These environments can be built or sourced as 3D assets and displayed on the wall, eliminating international travel costs entirely.
- Actor comfort and performance: Historical costumes are often heavy, layered, and warm. Performing outdoors in period dress under summer sun is physically draining. Our climate-controlled studio keeps actors comfortable, which directly translates to better performances.
- Sound control: Interview and dialogue content requires clean audio. Outdoor heritage sites are plagued by traffic, aircraft, wind, and tourists. Our studio stage is sound-friendly, giving you broadcast-quality audio with minimal post-production cleanup.
Tips for Producing Period Pieces on an LED Wall
Based on what we learned from Tea Under a Digital Sky and similar productions at Upperland Studio, here are practical recommendations for anyone planning a period-style shoot:
- Invest in foreground props: The most common mistake in LED wall production is neglecting the foreground. A bare stage with a beautiful digital background looks fake. Spend a portion of your budget on real furniture, plants, fabric, and objects that give the frame depth and texture.
- Match material palettes: Your physical props and your digital environment should share a coherent colour and material palette. Wood tones in the furniture should echo wood tones in the digital architecture. This is what makes the blend seamless.
- Plan your depth of field: Shooting with a shallow depth of field helps blend physical and digital elements. When the background is slightly soft, the transition between real props and LED wall becomes invisible.
- Use subtle background animation: Static digital backgrounds can feel flat and lifeless. Add gentle movement: drifting clouds, swaying branches, flickering candlelight. These small details register subconsciously and sell the reality of the scene.
- Consider practical lighting accents: A real candle or lantern placed in frame adds a point of warm light that connects the physical and digital worlds. Even if the lantern in your LED background is doing most of the work, a matching practical light in the foreground ties everything together.
For a deeper look at how LED wall studios compare to conventional set builds for this type of production, read our LED wall versus traditional film set comparison. You can also explore the full range of virtual production possibilities in our complete LED wall studio guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Upperland Studio create custom historical environments for my project?
Yes. Our team can build custom Unreal Engine environments based on your reference images, concept art, or historical period. We also source from libraries of pre-built 3D assets that cover a wide range of architectural styles and landscapes. Custom environment creation typically takes one to two weeks depending on complexity.
Do I need to supply my own props and wardrobe?
Yes, you are responsible for sourcing physical props and wardrobe. However, we can recommend local prop houses and costume rental services in the Greater Vancouver area. We also keep a small inventory of generic set dressing items (tables, chairs, plants) available for use at no extra charge.
Is the LED wall bright enough for interview lighting?
Absolutely. Our LED wall provides ample light for standard interview setups. In most cases, the wall itself serves as the key light source, and only minimal supplemental lighting is needed. This reduces setup time and creates a soft, natural, wrap-around light that is highly flattering for on-camera talent.
How does pricing work for a full-day interview shoot?
Our LED wall studio starts at $99 per hour with a two-hour minimum. Full-day bookings (eight hours or more) may qualify for discounted rates. Visit our pricing guide for current packages and details on what is included with your booking.
Bring Your Period Vision to Life
Whether you are producing a cultural documentary, a historical drama, a branded content series, or an educational course that demands visual authenticity, Upperland Studio gives you the tools to build any world without leaving Richmond, BC. Our LED wall, professional lighting, and experienced technical team are ready to help you create something remarkable.
Book your session at upperlandstudio.com or call 604-723-4239 / 778-668-3566. We are located at 238-13880 Wireless Way, Richmond, BC V6V 0A3.

