See how our clients solved real challenges with custom LED displays, from idea to execution.
You can read spec sheets. You can browse catalog images. But nothing gives you a better sense of what a custom LED screen can actually do than seeing how it solves a real problem.
This isn’t a collection of glossy showroom photos. These are field-tested, sometimes-messy, sometimes-brilliant moments from real clients with real needs—and how we worked together to get it done.
No perfect plans. Just honest execution.
Client: Global cosmetics retailer expanding across Southeast Asia
What they wanted: Eye-catching window displays to boost in-store foot traffic
What made it tricky: No two storefronts were the same—some were narrow, others all glass, and most had nowhere to hide cables or mount steel frames.
"We had screens from another supplier before. Beautiful—but impossible to maintain. They looked great for a month, then burned out or flickered," the client told us during a Zoom call from Bangkok.
We started with a pilot store. Instead of pushing a one-size-fits-all frame, we developed an ultra-slim, front-service LED system with adjustable side brackets that could mount directly on glass using discreet supports. The screen ran off a local control box and included passive motion sensors to auto-trigger display changes as shoppers walked past.
Outcome?
Foot traffic at the pilot store jumped by 27% within 6 weeks
Front-access modules cut downtime from 3 days to under 3 hours
The project scaled from 1 to 31 locations across 5 countries
And perhaps most satisfying? The marketing team could update visuals instantly from their HQ. No USB sticks. No waiting.
Client: Dubai-based event production company
Project scope: 20 sqm modular LED wall for touring concerts and festivals
The real challenge: Heat. Dust. Sandstorms. And live events where failure isn't an option.
“We had three shows back-to-back. On night one, half the screen shut off from heat overload. That was the moment we knew we needed a different partner.”
Our engineering team selected IP65-rated outdoor LED modules with sealed connectors and aluminum cabinets for passive cooling. We also added built-in temperature sensors and redundant power loops to keep signal integrity intact, even if one node failed. Every unit was stress-tested at 50°C before shipping.
We also tweaked the rig to support faster setups with a plug-and-stack system—no tools, no delays.
What changed?
Zero screen failures across 12 live shows
Cut install time from 8 to 5 hours
Client expanded the rental fleet the following quarter
The best part? We didn’t just solve the hardware issue—we gave them breathing room. No more late-night calls. No more “what if it fails” panic before curtain time.
Client: Public art and architecture collective, Germany
Project: Curved LED facade for a museum light installation
What made it different: The artist didn’t want a screen. They wanted “a living surface that breathes with the crowd.”
They had a vision: a ribbon-like metal sculpture suspended in the museum’s entrance that shimmered with digital motion—but nothing off-the-shelf could physically fit, let alone survive long-term exposure to humidity and UV.
“Can pixels curve without breaking?” they asked in our first call. A weird question. But exactly the right one.
We developed a flexible mesh-based LED system using custom-cut PCB ribbons that wrapped seamlessly around the aluminum contours. No fans—only silent drivers. The system synced with motion sensors to alter patterns based on visitor proximity, like ripples in a pond.
Results?
Featured in three international architecture magazines
Two design awards in under 12 months
98.5% uptime over two winters and one heatwave
We’re still proud of that one—not just because it worked, but because it kept the artist’s original vision intact. That’s the kind of project where engineering quietly fades into the background and lets the design speak.
No two clients were the same. And none of these jobs started with a blueprint.
They began with a problem. Or an idea. Or sometimes, just a rough sketch and a deadline.
But what they all shared was this:
→ Collaboration.
→ Trust.
→ And the belief that a screen isn't just hardware—it's a tool to express something that matters.
Here's what we’d tell anyone thinking about a custom LED install:
Pixel pitch and brightness are just the beginning. Context matters more than catalog specs.
Test your system under real-world conditions—not just showroom demos.
Build with maintenance in mind. Someday, something will need fixing. Design for that day.
If your screen doesn’t make people stop, smile, or say “wow,” you’ve missed the point.
We get it—you might not have all the answers yet. That’s normal.
We can help you figure it out, one piece at a time.
✅ Use our LED screen calculators
✅ Send us a rough drawing
✅ Book a 15-minute call
✅ Or just tell us your biggest unknown
No pressure. No jargon walls. Just people who actually enjoy solving strange screen problems.
And we’d love that.
Not because it adds another page to our portfolio,
but because helping your story come to life is why we’re in this business in the first place.