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Why Low Voltage Custom Outdoor Lighting?
Lighting Techniques
The techniques shown here* are used by Custom Outdoor Lighting
to dramatize your home and grounds at night and then turn
them into a warm, inviting atmosphere. By reviewing these
basic concepts you be able to see how outdoor lighting can
enhance the ambiance of your home.
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Style
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Description
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Area Lighting
- Placing fixtures in strategic locations above and/or
below eye level with overlapping beam spreads illuminates
area without emphasizing or accentuating any particular
part of the area. |
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Downlighting
- Lighting from above may illuminate an area for landscape
or architectural enhancement or special effects, and for
safety or security. May also be used to highlight a smaller
area, or a single feature, or to create a sense of perspective. |
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Grazing
- This technique accentuate the texture of the surface
being illuminated. Simply place the fixture close to the
plane of the wall, fence, or other feature, and direct
the light obliquely across it surface. |
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Moon Lighting
- A soft, natural, diffuse effect similar to natural moonlight
created by projecting light downward, with the light passing
through leaves and branches to cast shadows on the ground
below. This can be combined with fixtures directing light
upward to light the tree from below. |
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Pathway Lighting
- Light projected on a walkway from above or alongside
the illuminated surface. This can be done for safety and
security, as well as for aesthetic impact. |
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Security Lighting
- Strategic placement of accent lighting fixtures, combines
with low level illumination, provides security lighting
without glare for areas of any size. This provides ease
of navigation, and increase in safety. |
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Shadowing
- A pleasing traditional effect in which the shadow of
a tree, water from a fountain, or architectural element
is cast against a wall or other surface by strong frontal
illumination of the object. The size of the projected
image may be controlled by beam pattern or by varying
the distance from the light source to the object. |
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Silhouetting
- The backlighting of architectural elements, trees, or
other objects so they stand out before a wall, fence,
or other surface. This stunning theatrical effect is created
by placing the fixture directly behind and below the object. |
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Spot Lighting
- Individual features are powerfully illuminated from
above or below by a strong, narrowly focused beam of light.
Some examples of items benefiting from this technique
are sculptures, statues, landscape features, architectural
details, and flag poles.. |
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Step Lighting
- Designed for safety, step lighting clearly illuminates
the step area to insure proper visibility. Step lights
come in a variety of lighting options: fluorescent, incandescent,
incandescent, and tungsten halogen. |
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Underwater
- The use of submersible fixtures in ponds, fountains
and similar environments to create interesting and exciting
lighting effects. These can range from spot lighting from
beneath the water to soft, glowing area lighting of the
subsurface environment. |
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Uplighting
- Architectural and landscape elements become visually
dramatic features when illuminated from below. Fixtures
may be camouflaged by the use of glare shield and louvers
to hid the light source from the main viewing angle. |
*The marketing material provided in our Lighting
Techniques/Demo section is under the copyright of Lumiére
and Cooper Lighting and is reproduced with their permission.

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