Christmas lights COULD work if you used three or four strings (circuits) of them to achieve the chaser effect. HOWEVER, the cheapie version of Christmas lights you might find in the "dollar stores" probably won't do it because the distance between bulbs is less than two inches and it would be very difficult to cram three or four circuits (bulbs) into that space. You can purchase the commercial version of Christmas lights and they have five or six inches between bulbs. They're also a little brighter and heavier duty so you can use more strings of lights in one circuit. It's a lot of work drilling all the equally spaced holes and poking bulbs through to create the chaser lines, but the effect is authentic and impressive. It will give you the marquee look you are after.
As for controlling those three or four circuits, i.e. sequencing them to get the "chaser" look, there are a number of controllers available, including the system I am about to manufacture. SHAMELESS SELF PROMOTION ALERT! It can be configured for three step or four step sequencing, three bulbs on and one off (the traditional chaser look), one bulb on and three off, back and forth sequencing, "randomized" sparkle, and variable speed unity flashing. It's designed to use one controller and as many drivers as you want, so you can have everything sequence together, but control the brightness of different sections. We now have actual circuit boards, built and tested, and we've used them in our HIGH SCHOOL MUSICAL sign and a USO sign we created for a tribute performance for American military veterans, but I'm not quite at the packaging and distributing stage. If you want to contact me via "private messenger" (or through my business at mailto:Info@TheatricalReality.com - Info@TheatricalReality.com ), I'll be happy to send you some movie-ettes of what the effects look like. Good luck with whatever you do for your production.
------------- Growing old is mandatory. Growing up is optional.
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