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#1
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Lighting Question
I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that
is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. There are two 25 watt bulbs. Can this fade my picture after a period of time? Thanks. Kate |
#2
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Lighting Question
Kate wrote:
I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. There are two 25 watt bulbs. Can this fade my picture after a period of time? Usually yes. Of course it depends on whether the picture is an oil (acrylic, etc.), water color, charcoal, a black-and-white photo, a color photo, mosaics, and so on. Also the type of bulb matters. Check with the restoration section of your local art museum. |
#3
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Lighting Question
Thank you very much.
Kate HeyBub wrote: Kate wrote: I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. There are two 25 watt bulbs. Can this fade my picture after a period of time? Usually yes. Of course it depends on whether the picture is an oil (acrylic, etc.), water color, charcoal, a black-and-white photo, a color photo, mosaics, and so on. Also the type of bulb matters. Check with the restoration section of your local art museum. |
#4
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Lighting Question
Kate wrote: Thank you very much. Kate HeyBub wrote: Kate wrote: I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. There are two 25 watt bulbs. Can this fade my picture after a period of time? Usually yes. Of course it depends on whether the picture is an oil (acrylic, etc.), water color, charcoal, a black-and-white photo, a color photo, mosaics, and so on. Also the type of bulb matters. Check with the restoration section of your local art museum. --------------000804050404000705030202 Content-Type: text/html X-Google-AttachSize: 1011 !DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" html head meta content="text/html;charset=ISO-8859-1" http-equiv="Content-Type" title/title /head body bgcolor="#ffffff" text="#330000" Thank you very much.br br Katebr br HeyBub wrote: blockquote " type="cite" pre wrap=""Kate wrote: /pre blockquote type="cite" pre wrap=""I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. There are two 25 watt bulbs. Can this fade my picture after a period of time? /pre /blockquote pre wrap=""!---- Usually yes. Of course it depends on whether the picture is an oil (acrylic, etc.), water color, charcoal, a black-and-white photo, a color photo, mosaics, and so on. Also the type of bulb matters. Check with the restoration section of your local art museum. /pre /blockquote /body /html --------------000804050404000705030202-- If it is very expensive are, I'd worry about everything. But for prints or less expensive stuff, I double 50 watts of incandencent will do much. Florecent would be a concern, though. But 50 watts of florecent is quite a bit of light. If it's a photo or something will glass in front of it, don't worry because you should be using glass that will protect for UV. |
#5
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Lighting Question
Kate wrote:
I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. There are two 25 watt bulbs. Can this fade my picture after a period of time? Thanks. Kate Yes, any light will. However tungsten lamps do so far less than sun light. Also it is the total amount of light. -- Joseph Meehan Dia duit |
#6
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Lighting Question
On Sat, 30 Sep 2006 16:23:31 -0700, Kate wrote:
I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. There are two 25 watt bulbs. Can this fade my picture after a period of time? Thanks. Kate Not sure, but aren't picture lights UV filtered? A coating on teh bulbs? If so, I guess the fading problem might have been addresssed. later, tom @ www.Consolidated-Loans.info |
#7
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Lighting Question
Thank you. I am going to return the light.
Joseph Meehan wrote: Kate wrote: I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. There are two 25 watt bulbs. Can this fade my picture after a period of time? Thanks. Kate Yes, any light will. However tungsten lamps do so far less than sun light. Also it is the total amount of light. |
#8
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Lighting Question
The only thing it says on the package is: Tubular bulb incandescent
picture light. I think I will return it, as I am afraid of fading. Thank you. Tom The Great wrote: On Sat, 30 Sep 2006 16:23:31 -0700, Kate wrote: I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. There are two 25 watt bulbs. Can this fade my picture after a period of time? Thanks. Kate Not sure, but aren't picture lights UV filtered? A coating on teh bulbs? If so, I guess the fading problem might have been addresssed. later, tom @ www.Consolidated-Loans.info |
#9
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Lighting Question
Kate wrote: The only thing it says on the package is: Tubular bulb incandescent picture light. I think I will return it, as I am afraid of fading. Thank you. I wouldn't worry too much about 50 watts of incandescent. That's about as mild as you will get and still have it out in the open. Being near a window would do worse things. If it's valuable, 1 or a kind, there are other precautions you should take that would have more an impact than this. For example, what about your windows? You'll get more UV from them than anything. Tom The Great wrote: On Sat, 30 Sep 2006 16:23:31 -0700, Kate wrote: I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. There are two 25 watt bulbs. Can this fade my picture after a period of time? Thanks. Kate Not sure, but aren't picture lights UV filtered? A coating on teh bulbs? If so, I guess the fading problem might have been addresssed. later, tom @ www.Consolidated-Loans.info --------------060804080901020500070107 Content-Type: text/html X-Google-AttachSize: 1321 !DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" html head meta content="text/html;charset=ISO-8859-1" http-equiv="Content-Type" title/title /head body bgcolor="#ffffff" text="#330000" The only thing it says on the package is: Tubular bulb incandescent picture light. I think I will return it, asbr I am afraid of fading.br br Thank you.br br Tom The Great wrote:br blockquote m" type="cite" pre wrap=""On Sat, 30 Sep 2006 16:23:31 -0700, Kate a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E" "<basinnospam@ nwi.net>/a wrote: /pre blockquote type="cite" pre wrap=""I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. There are two 25 watt bulbs. Can this fade my picture after a period of time? Thanks. Kate /pre /blockquote pre wrap=""!---- Not sure, but aren't picture lights UV filtered? A coating on teh bulbs? If so, I guess the fading problem might have been addresssed. later, tom @ a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated" href="http://www.Consolidated-Loans.info"www.Consolidated-Loans.info/a /pre /blockquote /body /html --------------060804080901020500070107-- |
#10
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Lighting Question
Kate wrote: I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. There are two 25 watt bulbs. Can this fade my picture after a period of time? Thanks. Kate You're using something similar to these. If they were terrible, there'd be warnings here. Don't sweat it. http://www.dickblick.com/categories/picturelights/ |
#11
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Lighting Question
I always keep my blinds closed until the sun goes around the corner.
It is one of a kind, and I think I will call some art galleries tomorrow. Thanks for being so helpful. Kate wrote: The only thing it says on the package is: Tubular bulb incandescent picture light. I think I will return it, as I am afraid of fading. Thank you. I wouldn't worry too much about 50 watts of incandescent. That's about as mild as you will get and still have it out in the open. Being near a window would do worse things. If it's valuable, 1 or a kind, there are other precautions you should take that would have more an impact than this. For example, what about your windows? You'll get more UV from them than anything. Tom The Great wrote: On Sat, 30 Sep 2006 16:23:31 -0700, Kate wrote: I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. There are two 25 watt bulbs. Can this fade my picture after a period of time? Thanks. Kate Not sure, but aren't picture lights UV filtered? A coating on teh bulbs? If so, I guess the fading problem might have been addresssed. later, tom @ www.Consolidated-Loans.info --------------060804080901020500070107 Content-Type: text/html X-Google-AttachSize: 1321 !DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" html head meta content="text/html;charset=ISO-8859-1" http-equiv="Content-Type" title/title /head body bgcolor="#ffffff" text="#330000" The only thing it says on the package is: Tubular bulb incandescent picture light. I think I will return it, asbr I am afraid of fading.br br Thank you.br br Tom The Great wrote:br blockquote m" type="cite" pre wrap=""On Sat, 30 Sep 2006 16:23:31 -0700, Kate a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E" "<basinnospam@ nwi.net>/a wrote: /pre blockquote type="cite" pre wrap=""I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. There are two 25 watt bulbs. Can this fade my picture after a period of time? Thanks. Kate /pre /blockquote pre wrap=""!---- Not sure, but aren't picture lights UV filtered? A coating on teh bulbs? If so, I guess the fading problem might have been addresssed. later, tom @ a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated" href="http://www.Consolidated-Loans.info"www.Consolidated-Loans.info/a /pre /blockquote /body /html --------------060804080901020500070107-- |
#12
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Lighting Question
This is super helpful. Mine is very similar to the Hobby Hill Studio
Series, except I have two 25 watt incandesecent lights. Thanks for taking the time to help. Kate Pat wrote: Kate wrote: I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. There are two 25 watt bulbs. Can this fade my picture after a period of time? Thanks. Kate You're using something similar to these. If they were terrible, there'd be warnings here. Don't sweat it. http://www.dickblick.com/categories/picturelights/ |
#13
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Lighting Question
Kate wrote: I always keep my blinds closed until the sun goes around the corner. It is one of a kind, and I think I will call some art galleries tomorrow. Thanks for being so helpful. I hate to say this to someone who seems as terribly nice are you seem, but I don't think your issue is "lighting". I think you need professional help. But don't go visit a shrink, go visit someone and talk about preservation and preservation techniques. Think off all of the art you have seen in museums. Think about it. You saw it. YOU saw it. Life is risky and so is owning art. Either you can enjoy it or you can protect it, but it's hard to do both. Most oils on canvas are pretty durable things. Think what the old masters have been through and still survived. This of the frescos of the world with no protection. The old pigments were pretty durable. On the other extreme are photos and your kids 3rd grade drawing on newsprint. Those things will fade and deteriorate. There's not stopping it -- but there are some tricks that might seem like you can. There are also those things you can put behind glass (photos, prints) and those you can't (oils, canvas). If you can put it behind glass, get GOOD glass and do so. If you can't, get good glass (or sheets of UV film) in your windows. In either case, you can stop living in a cave and gets some good light into the place. Go talk to someone and you'll get some guidance. Can't help much here because there's no idea what kind of art it is. If it's professionally mounted and framed, that's probably good. If not, take it to someone who knows what they are doing and get it prepped right. Otherwise you might find the gasses, etc., from the mount might do more harm that anything else. Life's short. Enjoy your art. Don't do anything stupid, but don't get paranoid, either. Kate wrote: The only thing it says on the package is: Tubular bulb incandescent picture light. I think I will return it, as I am afraid of fading. Thank you. I wouldn't worry too much about 50 watts of incandescent. That's about as mild as you will get and still have it out in the open. Being near a window would do worse things. If it's valuable, 1 or a kind, there are other precautions you should take that would have more an impact than this. For example, what about your windows? You'll get more UV from them than anything. Tom The Great wrote: On Sat, 30 Sep 2006 16:23:31 -0700, Kate wrote: I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. There are two 25 watt bulbs. Can this fade my picture after a period of time? Thanks. Kate Not sure, but aren't picture lights UV filtered? A coating on teh bulbs? If so, I guess the fading problem might have been addresssed. later, tom @ www.Consolidated-Loans.info --------------060804080901020500070107 Content-Type: text/html X-Google-AttachSize: 1321 !DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" html head meta content="text/html;charset=ISO-8859-1" http-equiv="Content-Type" title/title /head body bgcolor="#ffffff" text="#330000" The only thing it says on the package is: Tubular bulb incandescent picture light. I think I will return it, asbr I am afraid of fading.br br Thank you.br br Tom The Great wrote:br blockquote m" type="cite" pre wrap=""On Sat, 30 Sep 2006 16:23:31 -0700, Kate a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E" "<basinnospam@ nwi.net>/a wrote: /pre blockquote type="cite" pre wrap=""I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. There are two 25 watt bulbs. Can this fade my picture after a period of time? Thanks. Kate /pre /blockquote pre wrap=""!---- Not sure, but aren't picture lights UV filtered? A coating on teh bulbs? If so, I guess the fading problem might have been addresssed. later, tom @ a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated" href="http://www.Consolidated-Loans.info"www.Consolidated-Loans.info/a /pre /blockquote /body /html --------------060804080901020500070107-- --------------000003010005080404040507 Content-Type: text/html X-Google-AttachSize: 4201 !DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" html head meta content="text/html;charset=ISO-8859-1" http-equiv="Content-Type" title/title /head body bgcolor="#ffffff" text="#330000" I always keep my blinds closed until the sun goes around the corner.br br It is one of a kind, and I think I will call some art galleries tomorrow. br br Thanks for being so helpful.br blockquote egroups.com" type="cite" pre wrap=""Kate wrote: /pre blockquote type="cite" pre wrap=""The only thing it says on the package is: Tubular bulb incandescent picture light. I think I will return it, as I am afraid of fading. Thank you. /pre /blockquote pre wrap=""!---- I wouldn't worry too much about 50 watts of incandescent. That's about as mild as you will get and still have it out in the open. Being near a window would do worse things. If it's valuable, 1 or a kind, there are other precautions you should take that would have more an impact than this. For example, what about your windows? You'll get more UV from them than anything. /pre blockquote type="cite" pre wrap=""Tom The Great wrote: /pre blockquote type="cite" pre wrap=""On Sat, 30 Sep 2006 16:23:31 -0700, Kate a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E" "<basinnospam@ nwi.net>/a wrote: /pre blockquote type="cite" pre wrap=""I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. There are two 25 watt bulbs. Can this fade my picture after a period of time? Thanks. Kate /pre /blockquote pre wrap="" Not sure, but aren't picture lights UV filtered? A coating on teh bulbs? If so, I guess the fading problem might have been addresssed. later, tom @ a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated" href="http://www.Consolidated-Loans.info"www.Consolidated-Loans.info/a /pre /blockquote pre wrap=""--------------060804080901020500070107 Content-Type: text/html X-Google-AttachSize: 1321 <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"> <html> <head> <meta content="text/html;charset=ISO-8859-1" http-equiv="Content-Type"> <title></title> </head> <body bgcolor="#ffffff" text="#330000"> The only thing it says on the package is:&nbsp; Tubular bulb incandescent picture light.&nbsp; I think I will return it, as<br> I am afraid of fading.<br> <br> Thank you.<br> <br> Tom The Great wrote:<br> <blockquote cite=a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E" href="mailto:midug00i2purmsjc7trge7fb6616ifjerooe4 @4ax.com""midug00i2purmsjc7trge7fb6616ifjerooe4@4 ax.com"/a type="cite"> <pre wrap="">On Sat, 30 Sep 2006 16:23:31 -0700, Kate <a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E" href=a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E" ""mailto:basinnos &gt;</a> wrote: </pre> <blockquote type="cite"> <pre wrap="">I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. There are two 25 watt bulbs. Can this fade my picture after a period of time? Thanks. Kate </pre> </blockquote> <pre wrap=""><!----> Not sure, but aren't picture lights UV filtered? A coating on teh bulbs? If so, I guess the fading problem might have been addresssed. later, tom @ <a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated" href=a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E" href="http://www.Consolidated-Loans.info""http://www.Consolidated-Loans.info"/a>a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated" href="http://www.Consolidated-Loans.info"www.Consolidated-Loans.info/a</a> </pre> </blockquote> </body> </html> --------------060804080901020500070107-- /pre /blockquote pre wrap=""!---- /pre /blockquote /body /html --------------000003010005080404040507-- |
#14
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Lighting Question
In article .com, Pat wrote:
Kate wrote: I always keep my blinds closed until the sun goes around the corner. It is one of a kind, and I think I will call some art galleries tomorrow. Thanks for being so helpful. I hate to say this to someone who seems as terribly nice are you seem, but I don't think your issue is "lighting". I think you need professional help. But don't go visit a shrink, go visit someone and talk about preservation and preservation techniques. Think off all of the art you have seen in museums. Think about it. You saw it. YOU saw it. Life is risky and so is owning art. Either you can enjoy it or you can protect it, but it's hard to do both. Most oils on canvas are pretty durable things. Think what the old masters have been through and still survived. This of the frescos of the world with no protection. The old pigments were pretty durable. On the other extreme are photos and your kids 3rd grade drawing on newsprint. Those things will fade and deteriorate. There's not stopping it -- but there are some tricks that might seem like you can. There are also those things you can put behind glass (photos, prints) and those you can't (oils, canvas). If you can put it behind glass, get GOOD glass and do so. If you can't, get good glass (or sheets of UV film) in your windows. A lot of glass passes more UV than a lot of people think. I would get UV film, and one I like is a stage lighting "filter gel" - GAM 1510 "UV Shield" - which blocks even a little borderline-visible-UV band that gets through polycarbonate. The Rosco 03114 is similar. Meanwhile, visible light (especially violet-blue) is not completely harmless. I would ask art preservation experts how much is reasonably safe. - Don Klipstein ) |
#15
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Lighting Question
Time is also a major factor here.
1 hour a day at 500 lux is the same damage as 5 hours a day at 100 lux. (Kate- lux is a measure of brightness on the painting.) A timer or just care in using your light can make a big difference for you. RickR |
#16
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Lighting Question
this woman knows more about this topic than all of us put together:
http://www.drloriv.com/advice/light.htm Empresser #124457 The best Games a href=http://www.gamestotal.com/Multiplayer Online Games/a a href=http://www.gamestotal.com/Strategy Games/abra href=http://uc.gamestotal.com/Unification Wars/a - a href=http://uc.gamestotal.com/Massive Multiplayer Online Games/abra href=http://gc.gamestotal.com/Galactic Conquest/a - a href=http://gc.gamestotal.com/Strategy Games/abra href=http://www.stephenyong.com/runescape.htmRunescape/abra href=http://www.stephenyong.com/kingsofchaos.htmKings of chaos/abr Kate wrote: I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. There are two 25 watt bulbs. Can this fade my picture after a period of time? Thanks. Kate --------------030002070607060209020202 Content-Type: text/html X-Google-AttachSize: 528 !DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" html head meta content="text/html;charset=ISO-8859-1" http-equiv="Content-Type" title/title /head body bgcolor="#ffffff" text="#330000" I just purchased a picture light. It is one of those fancy lights that is installed over a piece of artwork, and it then shows off the art at night. br br There are two 25 watt bulbs.br br Can this fade my picture after a period of time?br br Thanks.br br Katebr /body /html --------------030002070607060209020202-- |
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