| There
is an enormous range of low voltage lighting now available for the
garden but creating that desired 'lighting' affect is a question
of beam angle and brightness.
Beam
Angle
Beam
angle affects the coverage of a light. Sometimes you will want a
small pool of light from a narrow beam to accent a feature without
lighting the surroundings; other areas of your garden may require
the widest coverage available.
There
are typically four main beam angles 12, 24, 36 and 60 degrees.
- 12
degrees will produce a narrow spot beam and depending on the wattage
of your bulbs is ideal for up-lighting and down-lighting columns
and spotlighting
small, light coloured features.
- 24
degrees will produce a standard beam and again depending on the
wattage of your bulbs is ideal for up-lighting pergola posts &
climbers; and providing accent lighting.
- 36
degrees will produce a flood beam and is ideal for plant lighting
in small gardens;, accent lighting on close features and cross-lighting
steps.
- 60
degrees will produce a very wide flood beam and depending on the
wattage of your bulbs is ideal for plant lighting in small gardens,
down-lighting onto tables and providing ambient moon-lighting
from small trees.
Brightness
Brightness
isn't just about the wattage of the lamp. The brightness of a 20
watt lamp squeezed into a narrow spot beam can produce a brighter
pool of light than that of a 50 watt lamp projected in a wide flood
beam. So, first "fit" the beam angle to your subject then think
about brightness. But remember, 'brightness' will vary for a number
of reasons;
Individual
perception of brightness varies and this may be affected partly
by ambient light from nearby streetlights or "cityglow". Using exterior
lights with a range of lamp wattage choices will allow for changes
in the overall scheme.
Darker,
textured objects reflect less light back to the eye than smooth,
light coloured ones and will therefore require brighter lamps to
make them stand out. Use higher wattage bulbs for lighting dark
features. Make sure your transformers have the are flexibility and
spare capacity, to allow for upgrading from say, a 50 watt lamp
to a 75 watt one.
When
light hits an object or surface at an angle, the light is 'stretched'
which means the light is spread over a large area and therefore
seems less bright. Again having flexibility and capacity on your
transformer will allow you to change bulb wattage.
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