Frost Experience
Frost began more than 30 years ago as a special event lighting company. Since that time it has grown into a national company with offices in New York, Chicago, Washington D.C., and Florida. Frost professionals now offer a variety of creative services worldwide for the design, planning and execution of all types of events.
Frost Service
From the simplest intimate event to the most complex international gala, Frost professionals offer a variety of services from within the company, and in collaboration with allied event professionals worldwide. Frost has long term relationships with many world-renowned cultural institutions such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Lincoln Center, The New York Botanical Garden, and the New York Central Park Zoo. It has built events at major sporting venues including the U.S Open Tennis Championship in Forest Hills, and at numerous World Series.
Frost Professionals
Frost regularly installs its arsenal of state-of-the-art computerized robotic lighting at concerts. We produce stages and lighting for major figures in the fashion world in our carpentry and set shops. Architectural lighting designers at Frost can be found providing permanent lighting at historic glass conservatories, major architectural monuments, outdoor sculpture gardens, restaurants, department stores and notable residences in this country and abroad. Frost professionals work with corporations and cultural institutions nationally and worldwide to design and produce special events in dozens of states and many nations on four continents.
Frost Technology
Perhaps the greatest changes in event décor and production in the past two decades have occurred as the result of profound changes in lighting and media technology. While museum spaces, hotel ballrooms, tents and other event venues are largely the same spaces that they always were, the cocoon of lighting and visual media that envelop those spaces, its guests, and the entire production have gone through a profound change. And even the two words profound change are not adequate to describe the revolution that is taking place in event design.