Sunday, 27 August 2017

A Smart Look At Professional Landscape Lighting Kits

By Timothy Wood


Outdoor garden lighting has become fashionable for big gardens as well as for small patios. A lighted garden at night takes on another dimension. To light your garden, you need landscape lights. These can be put into trees, bushes, and edges as well as lawns, in decking and on walls. This will give a spectacular makeover to your garden. Putting Professional landscape lighting fixtures in the different parts your garden will allow you to make use of a part of your property that you work hard to make beautiful.

Before you do any online research and find yourself drooling at the remarkably low prices on some landscape lighting kits, you should know that there are good reasons for those low numbers. The saying goes, "you get what you pay for" and, to some extent, that's true here. That isn't to say that kits are bad ideas. Just that you should know what you're getting before you buy. Let's break down the good and the bad.

The do-it-yourself nature of landscape illumination kits can be seen in a positive or negative light. It just depends on how handy you are. Installation of kits requires very little in the way of tools or skills, but if you are deathly afraid of the outdoors or have never held a screwdriver in your life, you may find yourself challenged.

Exterior lighting fixtures come in some different styles - mural, lantern, column, and pedestal. There are also background lights that are fitted to a chain or installed on a bracket. Some of them are more traditional and create a Victorian atmosphere. Others are more modern. Some serve to create atmosphere, others are more festive. Some exterior lights are used to simply light the way to the house or the porch.

Area Illumination- Area Illumination focuses on the desired area. Flood lights or spot lights are used to illuminate larger areas such as playgrounds, patios, etc., or areas that require more illumination. They also serve as security illumination protecting your home from trespassers.

If you consider that these lights contain potentially hot bulbs and that they are made of a material that is prone to melting, you might have already concluded what I'm about to tell you. Low-cost, plastic landscaping lights contain low wattage bulbs so as not to melt the housings in which they are contained. Your average low is a 10-watt bulb for border illumination. Your average high for accent/spot lights runs about 20 watts. Is that enough? Commercially purchased single units run 20+ watt bulbs for border and path lights and 35+ watts for accent and spot lights, you may get the picture that, for some applications, the lights included in some kits are simply too dim.

The reason behind this is that one can use multi hued lights at night; along with special effect ones... An effect that can never be achieved by natural light. Spend some time browsing the internet, and you will find details about many special lights that are designed especially for backgrounds.

An upside to that plastic construction is that the stuff is surprisingly durable. Even should one of the lights be damaged by an errant lawn mower or a clumsy guest, replacing one of the units is painless and inexpensive. Not so should they inadvertently destroy one of your custom designed metal units.




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