When the Flames go on a run, Calgary doesn't keep it inside the Saddledome. The C of Red spills out — flags on cars, jerseys in the grocery store, and by the first intermission, whole streets glowing red and gold. Three hours north, it's the same story in orange and blue. If your house looks the same on game night as it does every other night of the year, you're leaving the easiest fan move in Alberta on the table.

Permanent LED lighting turns your whole house into the biggest jersey on the block. No flags to hang. No coloured bulbs to hunt down in April when every store sold out in the first round. You tap a saved scene, and your house is in team colours before the anthem ends.

And let's get this out of the way early: we install in Calgary and Edmonton. We don't pick a side in the Battle of Alberta. We just make both sides brighter.

Officially Neutral Starise installs across Calgary, Edmonton, Red Deer, and most of the towns in between. When the Battle of Alberta is on, half our customers glow red and half glow orange — and the app doesn't judge either one.

The exact colour recipes, team by team

These are the recipes we give customers who ask for team colours. They're tuned for how LEDs read from the street at night — not for how ink reads on a jersey — which is why a couple of them run slightly brighter than the official swatch. Trust the recipe. Your eyes will confirm from the sidewalk.

1. Calgary Flames — The C of Red

Flames Red #C8102E Gold #FFC72C

Alternating red and gold around the full roofline is the classic — the look that makes an entire street read as Flames territory. Run it static at 85% brightness so it holds clean from the end of the block. For a playoff run, shift the ratio: mostly red with a gold accent every few sections. The street should read RED first — that's the entire point of the C of Red — and let the gold do the trim work.

App: Alternate → Red (#C8102E) / Gold (#FFC72C) → Static → Brightness: 85%

2. Edmonton Oilers — Oil Country Orange & Blue

Oilers Orange #FF4C00 Royal Blue #0055C8

Here's the thing about Oilers navy: it's beautiful on a jersey and nearly invisible on a roofline. Dark navy LEDs read as "off" from the street. So our Oilers recipe bumps the blue up to a brighter royal blue and keeps the orange hot. Alternate the two, or run orange as the base with blue accents on peaks and gables — either way, there's no mistaking whose house it is.

App: Alternate → Orange (#FF4C00) / Royal Blue (#0055C8) → Static → Brightness: 85%

3. Calgary Stampeders — Red & White for Football Season

Red #C8102E White

Come summer, the Stamps take over the calendar. Red and white alternate is bold, simple, and — bonus — it doubles as your Canada Day scene, so save it once and use it twice a year. For the Labour Day Classic, go full red with a single white chase running the roofline. It moves, it's loud, and it's unmistakably football weather.

App: Alternate → Red (#C8102E) / White → Static → Brightness: 80%

4. Edmonton Elks — Green & Gold

Green #00843D Gold #FFB81C

Green and gold might be the best-looking combination you can put on a house — rich, unexpected, and instantly Elks to anyone driving through on game day. The navy rule applies here too: skip the deepest forest green and run a true green so the colour carries at night instead of vanishing into your shingles.

App: Alternate → Green (#00843D) / Gold (#FFB81C) → Static → Brightness: 85%
Team Base scene Win scene Season
Flames Red / gold alternate, static, 85% Red-gold pulse, 5–10 min October–June (we're believers)
Oilers Orange / royal blue alternate, static, 85% Orange pulse, 5–10 min October–June
Stampeders Red / white alternate, static, 80% White chase on red base June–November
Elks Green / gold alternate, static, 85% Gold pulse, 5–10 min June–November

The goal-horn scene: how to celebrate a win

The final horn sounds, your team takes it, and ten seconds later your whole house is pulsing in team colours. That's the move. Here's how to have it ready before puck drop:

Playoff-run etiquette: when the whole street goes red

The best version of playoff lighting isn't one house — it's a street. During a deep run, entire Calgary cul-de-sacs go red, and Edmonton crescents turn orange, one roofline at a time. A few unwritten rules keep it fun for everyone:

Mixed households: surviving the Battle of Alberta

Every Alberta neighbourhood has at least one: a Flames fan married to an Oilers fan, coexisting peacefully for eleven months of the year and negotiating hard for the twelfth. The good news is that your house doesn't have to pick a side either:

Don't forget football season

Alberta's sports calendar doesn't end when the ice melts. From June through November the Stamps and the Elks carry the rivalry, and the Labour Day Classic — the football Battle of Alberta — deserves the same treatment as any playoff game. Red and white for McMahon, green and gold for Commonwealth, recipes above.

And if your house is dressed up for summer game days anyway, it's a short hop to Stampede week lighting — same system, different party.

Set it up once, use it all season

The whole point of team lighting is that it costs you zero effort on game night. A few minutes of setup in the app covers the entire run:

Team scenes are one page of a much bigger playbook. The same system covers Canada Day, Halloween, Christmas, Diwali, and everything in between — we've mapped the whole year in our Alberta holiday lighting calendar. And if you want to squeeze more out of the app itself, start with the app features most customers never find.

What does it cost to get in the game?

Most Starise installs land between $3,000 and $8,000 depending on the size and complexity of the home — a small single-level typically runs $3,000–$4,500, and a mid-size two-storey around $5,000–$7,000. Running costs are about $5–$15 a month in power, so an entire playoff run of game-night lighting costs less than a single pair of decent tickets. The full breakdown is in our Calgary pricing guide.

Frequently asked questions

Can the lights actually match official Flames or Oilers colours?
Close enough that nobody on your sidewalk will question it. The app gives you millions of colours, so you can dial each section to taste. The one adjustment we always recommend: brighten dark navy and deep forest green. Official jersey shades are tuned for fabric, not LEDs at night — a slightly brighter blue or green reads as the team colour from the street, while the exact dark swatch just reads as off.
Will a flashing goal-horn scene annoy the neighbours?
Not if you play it like a celebration instead of a siren. Keep pulse scenes to five or ten minutes after a win, use moderate speeds rather than maximum strobe, and schedule your lights to dim later in the evening. On a street where everyone's watching the same game, the bigger risk is your neighbours being annoyed you didn't flash the lights.
We're a split household — can the house show both teams?
Yes. Multi-zone control lets different sections of the house run different scenes at the same time, so the garage can hold the C of Red while the front porch flies orange and blue. Set it up once, save it as its own scene, and nobody has to reprogram anything on game night.
Does playoff-season weather affect the lights?
No. Playoff hockey in Alberta usually comes with at least one April snowstorm, and the system is built for far worse — IP65/IP68-rated components with an operating range of -40°C to +60°C, tested through Calgary winters and Chinook freeze-thaw cycles. The lights will outlast the weather and, some seasons, the playoff run.
Do you install in Edmonton, or just Calgary?
Both — plus Red Deer, Airdrie, Cochrane, Okotoks, Kelowna, and most communities in between. We're Calgary-based, but the Battle of Alberta is a two-city rivalry and we serve both sides of it with identical enthusiasm.

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