DNP Denmark Affirms Excellent Relationship with Ong Radio

World’s leading projection screen craftsmen, DNP Denmark, reaffirmed its excellent relationship with its distributor, Ong Radio in a recent visit by Area managers for Asia, Mr Anjum Parwaiz, and Ms Maggie Ng.

“With a 65% market share, DNP Denmark is the world’s foremost maker of patented optical projection screens for ultra-high quality display solutions, which Ong Radio takes great pride in representing to the high-end home theatre market”, says Mr Marcus Loh, VP for Ong Radio. He adds, “DNP remains an important element to the systems we design because they exact the very standards demanded by our clients who want only the very best for the ultimate movie experience in their private theatres.”

Since 1989, DNP Denmark has been the worldwide large-screen production centre of Dai Nippon Printing Co. Ltd. With 35 production plants, 21 product divisions, more than 34,000 employees worldwide and an annual turnover exceeding USD 13 billion. Ong Radio remains DNP’s exclusive distributor of its Teatro-HD screen range, and is also primarily responsible for the DNP home entertainment market.  

 

 
Above is an image projected on a DNP Teatro-HD Ultimate material, and bottom is the same image projected on a conventional white screen

 

DNP Teatro-HD Ultimate – The Power of Contrast

Leading experts agree that in bright projection environments, contrast is crucial to achieving an outstanding image. Conventional projection screens are associated with darkness, curtains and blinds. They reflect all available light not just the projector’s light, creating poor contrast levels. These low contrast ratios often cause eyestrain – and make it hard for the audience to concentrate. Empirical studies show that in order for a viewer to be able to see detailed information clearly, the minimum acceptable image contrast is 15:1. This is not achievable using a standard white front projection screen in normal environments. That is why, in 2004, DNP Denmark introduced the world’s first front projection screen to break the 15:1 contrast barrier.