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Landscape
Lighting Tips
Landscape
Lighting Brightens Your Life
Night-lighting Your Landscape Offers a Creative Way to Showcase
Your Home
Landscape lighting used to be simple. A few recessed can
fixtures lining the front path, a couple downlights tucked
in the trees, and you were done. Not anymore. When it comes
to the great outdoors, homeowners have seen the light.
'Today,
the biggest excitement in outdoor lighting is the whole
artistic aspect,' says Richard Lentz, president and owner
of Lentz Landscape, a lighting company in Dallas. 'Think
of it as painting a picture of the landscape at night, using
lights to achieve the look a homeowner wants.'
Night-lighting
your landscape offers a creative way to showcase your home
and property after dark. Properly placed, lights can dramatize
trees, highlight favorite shrubs and accent statuary, fountains
and flowerbeds. Like any creative work, the options abound.
'The
challenge with landscape lighting is that most people don't
immediately see all the possibilities,' says Joe Rey-Barreau,
American Lighting Association Consulting Director of Education
and director of the Lighting and Design Center at the University
of Kentucky. 'Outdoor lighting can be both functional and
aesthetic. It's an art to understand how much light to place
on a house or determine where the focal points are.'
To light
correctly, key in on architectural features. Uplight an
arbor, archway or facade for a dramatic effect. Wash the
side of the house with a splash of light. Graze a textured
fence or wall with a focused beam. Illuminate the water
in a pool or pond with submersible lights. Silhouette a
tree or bush by placing lights below and behind the object.
While some lights take a fashionable approach, others focus
on function. Low voltage lights installed under handrails,
stairs and bench seating on decks help lighten things up
for outdoor entertaining. Stronger beams designed to shine
over an outdoor activity area like a basketball court add
extra hours of post-dusk fun.
'If
you cook out at night, position a spotlight in the eaves
of the house to send a beam directly over the BBQ,'' says
Rey-Barreau.
A well
lit home is also safer and more secure. Illuminated steps,
paths and driveways prevent after-dark accidents. Motion
detectors light up obscure spots when someone passes by.
Photocells automatically turn on fixtures at dusk and off
at dawn, providing protection even when you're away from
home.
'If
your home is not properly lighted, there is a greater chance
of someone breaking in,' says Daniel Lecian, ALA Lighting
Specialist for the Hermitage Lighting Gallery in Nashville,
TN.
The
key to attractive outdoor lighting follows a less-is-more
philosophy. Soft, natural light should mimic moonlight on
the property.
'It's
important not to over-light,' says George Carter, vice president,
marketing for Kichler Lighting Group in Cleveland, OH. 'What
you should see is the landscape, not the lights so that
the outdoor lighting tells a visual story at night.'
When
installing outdoor lights, conceal the light source behind
shrubs, tree branches or other foliage -- unless the fixture
is a decorative element.
'You
should see the light effect, not the source,' says Rey-Barreau.
'The bulb and fixture should disappear when the lights are
turned on. All that should be visible is the glow of light
on the flowers, the wall or the path.'
The
booming economy has helped foster the current fascination
in landscape lighting. 'The trends have been very home oriented,'
says Lentz. 'With the strong economy, people are interested
in dressing up their homes even more.'
Lighting
showrooms and manufacturers have expanded their stock as
well, resulting in more outdoor options for consumers. 'For
a long time, landscape lighting revolved around do-it-yourself,
low-voltage lights picked up at home centers and installed
by the consumer in a line about two feet apart,' says Rey-Barreau.
'These were not really made to withstand the weather conditions
and were not long-term solutions.'
Styles
range from large overhead cylindrical floodlights to minute
spot or accent lights used for highlighting specific features.
Spread and diffused units set low to the ground, line paths,
flowerbeds and driveways and cast a broader glow. The latest
looks in such path lights depend on fixtures that can be
placed further apart to create a more attractive glow. Some
lights are patterned like three-leaf clusters or single
leaf containers. Others boast more traditional lantern styles.
Still others beam from within floral fixtures installed
in flowerbeds.
'There
have been new product developments,'' says Rey-Barreau.
'Weather-resistant products and new plastic technology are
both attractive and functional.'
Bulbs
have also improved. Newer 65-and 120-watt incandescent bulbs
provide up to 25% more light. Compact fluorescent bulbs
produce soft lighting, the highest energy savings, and last
up to 10,000 hours. Mercury vapor bulbs supply a strong,
cost-conscious light with a cool color that can last as
long as 24,000 hours -- or six years burning dusk to dawn.
While
most homeowners opt for pure white light, others like the
hint of hue. Warm tones like yellow or red introduced properly
can make the landscape come alive at night. Green lights
can make foliage look even greener.
'Be
careful with colored lights,'' says Rey-Barreau. 'Unless
they are done carefully, they can look garish.'
The
cost for installing outdoor lighting is as varied as the
landscape designs. According to experts, highlighting a
couple of trees in a typical suburban front lawn could run
from $800 to $1,200. A one-acre property with an elaborate
lighting scheme can cost as much as $10,000.
Come
visit our showrooms to expand your knowledge about lighting.
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