Good to know
The questions we hear most.
Practical details vary by venue, weather, and local requirements. For a specific location, send an inquiry and we can assess what is possible.
Yes. Shows are handled by a licensed pyrotechnics team, with the required coordination for the venue, local authorities, and fire safety officers before anything is fired.
We check the open space, firing direction, crowd distance, nearby buildings, trees, wires, roads, and wind exposure. If the site is not suitable for aerial fireworks, we suggest safer alternatives.
Yes. We're a licensed manufacturer as well, so many of the effects you see are made by the same team that fires them on the night.
Most event displays are short and focused. The exact length depends on the event, location, budget, and type of effects used.
Yes. For weddings, concerts, countdowns, and launches, we can design the sequence around a song, countdown, entrance, reveal, or scheduled cue.
Light rain is often manageable, but strong wind, lightning, or unsafe conditions can change the plan. The crew checks conditions on site and will prioritize safety over forcing a show.
Some effects are loud, especially aerial finales. For venues with noise concerns, we can recommend quieter pacing, smaller effects, or alternatives that still give the crowd a great moment.
Some events are better suited to stage sparks, cold-fire style effects, or controlled ground effects instead of aerial shells. The right setup depends on the venue rules, ceiling height, ventilation, and safety clearance.
We are based in Cabuyao, Laguna and regularly work across Laguna and nearby parts of Luzon. For farther locations, the site, schedule, transport, and local requirements need to be checked first.
The event location, date, type of celebration, expected crowd size, available open space, and any venue restrictions are the most useful details. Photos or a map pin of the firing area help too.

