goodarticlelist.com goodarticlelist.com
  Main :> About Us :> Place Your Link :> Security & Privacy :> Terms & Conditions :> Submit Article
Search:   
 

Finishing your Wood Products

Protecting your investment after you have chosen to install quality wooden windows and doors or any ... - Kelly Parker
 

Dog Beds?

Over the years we have been asked many questions about dog beds in general and about our dog beds sp ... - Mike Steele
 

Walk Away Safe

Shoes have no face. We need Unity. We need to take back our country from the criminals. We shouldn't ... - W J Lozier
 
 

Home Business Start Up -- Advertising Sales Consultant

An Advertising Sales Consultant Home Based Business has low start up costs and has a huge profit pot ... - Shawn Price
 

Homebuilding: Setting Basement Steel

One of the first steps in the construction of a new home is setting the steel beams and columns in t ... - Mike Merisko
 

Security Cameras for Your Home

A simple observation of the city will tell you security cameras are everywhere these days. The reaso ... - Anthony Neary
 

Spending Time With Your Child

The term "spending time with your child" gets tossed out there fairly casually. We hear it so often ... - Russell Turner
 

Kids and boundaries

How to give kids boundaries and stick to them, getting you kids to follow your rules and respecting ... - niclyn
 
 

Main –› Home & Garden –› Horticulture & Gardening
 

Landscape and Outdoor Lighting - Less is Definitely More

 
Author: Rita Preece
 

When lighting your garden, less is definitely more. Flood lighting is fine for a traffic intersection, but at home it is energy inefficient, expensive and creates light pollution. You and your garden deserve better.

Outdoor lighting is most effective when used sparingly and in specific spots. Your garden is the transition space between the outside world and your own home. The right lighting can make your garden into another room of your house as well as providing an attractive outlook from inside. And your garden can look surprisingly different at night-time. Just a few lights in appropriate places will create interesting pools of light and shadow. Directional lighting will highlight features that may go unnoticed during the day, like the bark of a silver birch or a eucalypt, or a tinkling fountain. Even sheets of falling rain and swirling shrouds of mist can become dramatic features of your landscape with the right lighting.

Do check that your directional lighting shines onto the feature you intend it to and not into your neighbour's bedroom window. And consider that a tree you want to highlight may be home to birds and other wild-life. You can minimize disruption to their habitat by using an automatic time-clock on your lighting.

For driveways, paths and steps, use lights that are directed to your feet to create pools of light to guide you. A light that is too high will shine into your face and leave the path and steps in shadow. A lamp next to your front door may look attractive, but a pool of light directed onto the door knocker, the keyhole and the step will provide a safer and warmer welcome for you and your visitors.

Choose colour temperatures to suit what you are trying to light and the mood you are trying to create. The colour temperature of a light is measured in Kelvins (K). The higher the colour temperature, the cooler the light will look. For example, metal halide lamps have a high, cool colour temperature that makes the greens and blues of the foliage in your garden look fresh and bright. Lamps with low, warm colour temperatures bring out the warmth of reds and oranges, like candlelight. An example of cool and warm colour temperature lighting complementing each other in your garden design would be to create a cool, fresh garden with warm pools of light around the paved areas where people gather and sit or linger over a candle-lit dinner.

The Colour Rendering Index(CRI) indicates how a light reacts under different parts of the colour spectrum. This applies particularly to metal halide and fluorescent lights, affecting the appearance of flowers and shrubs and also skin tones. And low-pressure sodium lights give out a huge amount of light but suppress both greens and reds, so that everything looks yellow and grey. Which brings us back to that traffic intersection.

A catalog will give you the specifications and features of the lighting you are considering, but if you are still in the dark, your lighting showroom will have a consultant who can shed some light on the subject for you.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Candle-Proof Your Home From Accidents
 
The Business Side of Craft Shows
 
Sewing Machines are Useful Everyday
 
Safely Feeding Babies - 10 Important Tips
 
Tooling Leather
 
Planning Considerations for Bathroom Remodeling
 
The Less Stress, Less Mess, Smarter Way To Paint A Room
 
The Five Steps Of Decorating
 
How to Teach YOUR Cat to Use a Litter Box - Secrets to Litter Tray Success
 
How Wooden Shutters Can Add Value To Your Home!
 
 
 
Free 3 way links
 

Jobs & Careers

Health & Hygiene

Finance & Banking

Politics & Government

Online & Board Games

Self Enhancement

Academics & Learning

Shopping & Auction

Lifestyle & Fashion

Internet & Computers

Children

Art & Culture

Business & Services

Vehicles & Automotive

News & Media

Realty & Property

Cooking & Drinking

Research & Science

Travel & Accommodation

Medicine & Treatment

Adventure & Sports

Home & Garden

People & Society

Recreation & Entertainment

 
   Main :> Security & Privacy :> Terms & Conditions
Copyright © 2006-2008 www.goodarticlelist.com - All Rights Reserved.