Ground Fog And Visual Effects Machine
This Party Ground Fog Machine produces thick water-based fog and generates thousands of cubic feet of fog per minute! This is great for party's and adds special visual effects, fun and excitement!
Excellent Special Effect for Rock Bands
If you're starting out with your new band, consider a fog machine like the Low Lying Ice Fogger to get the job done for you during the concert. It is an incredible effect well liked by the audiences. It is all up to you to make the production one they won't soon forget.
When Is a fog really a fog?
December 11, 1921 by Staff Writer
And to what extent is a fog in London, the city of vapors, a fog? It has taken tin American motion picture exhibitor to tell the inhabitants of the English metropolis just what sort of an atmosphere they- are living in and the bearing it has on their lives.
A gentleman named Wanger is the American in question,. His definition was that fog is fog when it prevents trains from leaving the London railroad stations. Lloyd’s, the insurance house that has consented to gamble with him on the question, has accepted this.
Mr. Wanger, a new Invader of the London film field, leased the old Convent Garden theater for his shows and opened during; the' prevalence of the worst fog London has seen' in many years. Alarmed lest It obscure the pictures on the screen or prevent crowds from coming. Mr. Wanger applied to Lloyds for the odds on fog insurance and was offered insurance of £800 a performance, which is 80 per cent of the capacity of the house, at the rate of £2 premium per £100.
The matter appeared to be settled but just then Lloyd's said to Mr. Wanger that fog, of course, meant fog – real pea soup fog in which a man's arm, stock out In front of him, appears to be cut off at the elbow.
This wasn't quite a legal definition so the American Insisted on a technical definition of fog In the policy.
"Fog is fog- when it is so thick I can't show my pictures," he suggested.
."Fog is fog” only when the London railway Termini are disorganized Lloyd's Insisted.
"Termini are disorganized when trains leave on time but arrive late," Mr. Wanger counter-proposed hopefully.
"No," said Lloyd's; "for a fog in the next county might delay arrival."
Then the American retired to think It over. Finally, he returned to the conference with a definition, which was accepted, and which may become the standard In future cases. He said fog Is fog when It prevents trains from leaving on time, and this time Lloyd's agreed.
