The Season of (Electric) Light: Difference between revisions

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== The Evolution of Holiday Lighting ==
== The Evolution of Holiday Lighting ==


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Before the last autumn leaf has fallen, many cities and towns will be sponsoring their annual holiday tree and menorah lightings. Illuminated municipal buildings and shopping centers will lure customers to linger past dark, and at the top of many holiday gift lists will be flat-screen televisions and electronic games and gadgets. From November until January, the season is awash in light.
Before the last autumn leaf has fallen, many cities and towns will be sponsoring their annual holiday tree and menorah lightings. Illuminated municipal buildings and shopping centers will lure customers to linger past dark, and at the top of many holiday gift lists will be flat-screen televisions and electronic games and gadgets. From November until January, the season is awash in light.  


<br>While candles have marked many holiday traditions for centuries, electric light added a new dimension. In 1882, just three years after Thomas Alva Edison’s invention of the light bulb, an enterprising associate, Edward Johnson, thought of replacing the customary Christmas tree candles with electric light bulbs. But adorning the tree with Johnson's lights was not a simple matter of untangling the string of lights and draping them around the tree — the bulbs needed to be specially made and hand attached to an electric wire. No Saturday afternoon project, achieving a lighting spectacle required a professional to assemble and hang the decorations. Nevertheless, the idea caught on, with President Grover Cleveland inaugurating the first electrified White House Christmas tree in 1895.
<br>While candles have marked many holiday traditions for centuries, electric light added a new dimension. In 1882, just three years after Thomas Alva Edison’s invention of the light bulb, an enterprising associate, Edward Johnson, thought of replacing the customary Christmas tree candles with electric light bulbs. But adorning the tree with Johnson's lights was not a simple matter of untangling the string of lights and draping them around the tree — the bulbs needed to be specially made and hand attached to an electric wire. No Saturday afternoon project, achieving a lighting spectacle required a professional to assemble and hang the decorations. Nevertheless, the idea caught on, with President Grover Cleveland inaugurating the first electrified White House Christmas tree in 1895.  


<br>Innovations in lighting technology, including parallel lights that remained lit after one bulb in a string burned out, sets of lights that could be connected end-to-end to create longer chains, safety measures to prevent fires, and aesthetic improvements — new shapes, designs and colors — eventually followed, although it would still be many years before the now standard lights came into widespread household use after the First World War.
<br>Innovations in lighting technology, including parallel lights that remained lit after one bulb in a string burned out, sets of lights that could be connected end-to-end to create longer chains, safety measures to prevent fires, and aesthetic improvements — new shapes, designs and colors — eventually followed, although it would still be many years before the now standard lights came into widespread household use after the First World War.  


<br>By 1923, Calvin Coolidge had made the annual National Tree Lighting an event of political significance. The significance of the tree lighting ceremony grew with the advent of the Second World War. Crowds gathered and others listened to the proceedings on the radio shortly after the outbreak of war in 1941, as Franklin Roosevelt — joined by British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in a surprise diplomatic visit to Washington, D.C. — made moving speeches and were joined in songs and hymns in celebration of peace. The tree was not lit again until the end of the war in 1945. Lighting — or not lighting — the tree became an occasion marked with symbolism. The tree remained dark until thirty days of mourning had passed following the assassination of John Kennedy in 1963, and again in 1979 and 1980 in honor of the Americans held hostage in Iran. In 1995, the tree was lit for the first time by solar energy.
<br>By 1923, Calvin Coolidge had made the annual National Tree Lighting an event of political significance. The significance of the tree lighting ceremony grew with the advent of the Second World War. Crowds gathered and others listened to the proceedings on the radio shortly after the outbreak of war in 1941, as Franklin Roosevelt — joined by British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in a surprise diplomatic visit to Washington, D.C. — made moving speeches and were joined in songs and hymns in celebration of peace. The tree was not lit again until the end of the war in 1945. Lighting — or not lighting — the tree became an occasion marked with symbolism. The tree remained dark until thirty days of mourning had passed following the assassination of John Kennedy in 1963, and again in 1979 and 1980 in honor of the Americans held hostage in Iran. In 1995, the tree was lit for the first time by solar energy.  


<br>The newest lights now gaining popularity are Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs). Because LEDS do not require filaments or glass bulbs, they can produce bright white light, and through the use of refractors, a range of vibrant colors. Moreover, they are being made in a huge variety of shapes and sizes. Even more appealingly, especially in view of the rising economic and environmental costs of energy consumption, the new lights burn longer and more efficiently, and are less subject to damage, all of which make them a desirable consumer alternative to traditional lighting.<br>
<br>The newest lights now gaining popularity are Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs). Because LEDS do not require filaments or glass bulbs, they can produce bright white light, and through the use of refractors, a range of vibrant colors. Moreover, they are being made in a huge variety of shapes and sizes. Even more appealingly, especially in view of the rising economic and environmental costs of energy consumption, the new lights burn longer and more efficiently, and are less subject to damage, all of which make them a desirable consumer alternative to traditional lighting.&nbsp;&nbsp;In keeping with efforts to be energy efficient, the tree at the National Capitol is now lit with LED bulbs.


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[[Category:Lasers%2C_lighting_%26_electrooptics]]
[[Category:Lasers,_lighting_&_electrooptics|Category:Lasers,_lighting_&amp;_electrooptics]]

Revision as of 19:25, 8 September 2008

The Evolution of Holiday Lighting

<pageby nominor="false" comments="false"></pageby>;

Before the last autumn leaf has fallen, many cities and towns will be sponsoring their annual holiday tree and menorah lightings. Illuminated municipal buildings and shopping centers will lure customers to linger past dark, and at the top of many holiday gift lists will be flat-screen televisions and electronic games and gadgets. From November until January, the season is awash in light.


While candles have marked many holiday traditions for centuries, electric light added a new dimension. In 1882, just three years after Thomas Alva Edison’s invention of the light bulb, an enterprising associate, Edward Johnson, thought of replacing the customary Christmas tree candles with electric light bulbs. But adorning the tree with Johnson's lights was not a simple matter of untangling the string of lights and draping them around the tree — the bulbs needed to be specially made and hand attached to an electric wire. No Saturday afternoon project, achieving a lighting spectacle required a professional to assemble and hang the decorations. Nevertheless, the idea caught on, with President Grover Cleveland inaugurating the first electrified White House Christmas tree in 1895.


Innovations in lighting technology, including parallel lights that remained lit after one bulb in a string burned out, sets of lights that could be connected end-to-end to create longer chains, safety measures to prevent fires, and aesthetic improvements — new shapes, designs and colors — eventually followed, although it would still be many years before the now standard lights came into widespread household use after the First World War.


By 1923, Calvin Coolidge had made the annual National Tree Lighting an event of political significance. The significance of the tree lighting ceremony grew with the advent of the Second World War. Crowds gathered and others listened to the proceedings on the radio shortly after the outbreak of war in 1941, as Franklin Roosevelt — joined by British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in a surprise diplomatic visit to Washington, D.C. — made moving speeches and were joined in songs and hymns in celebration of peace. The tree was not lit again until the end of the war in 1945. Lighting — or not lighting — the tree became an occasion marked with symbolism. The tree remained dark until thirty days of mourning had passed following the assassination of John Kennedy in 1963, and again in 1979 and 1980 in honor of the Americans held hostage in Iran. In 1995, the tree was lit for the first time by solar energy.


The newest lights now gaining popularity are Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs). Because LEDS do not require filaments or glass bulbs, they can produce bright white light, and through the use of refractors, a range of vibrant colors. Moreover, they are being made in a huge variety of shapes and sizes. Even more appealingly, especially in view of the rising economic and environmental costs of energy consumption, the new lights burn longer and more efficiently, and are less subject to damage, all of which make them a desirable consumer alternative to traditional lighting.  In keeping with efforts to be energy efficient, the tree at the National Capitol is now lit with LED bulbs.


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