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by Pottery Barn
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| Pottery Barn aptly describes this nautical fixture as being handsome, and isn't it just? I love how the graphic, elongated shape of the bulb area serves to frame the exposed filament bulb. This is my favorite pick of the lighting market at the moment! |
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by Pottery Barn
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| If you're keen to work the exposed bulb trend into track lighting, then these industrial-style bulbs are the perfect fit. I'd like to hang a line of these over a kitchen island. |
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by Pottery Barn
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| The burnished copper finish is what sells this pendant shade to me; the peek of the bulb showing underneath adds intrigue to the design. |
Loved the book!
Re: phasing out of incandescent bulbs, I found this piece on wikipedia with various dates for countries across the world, which might help a little?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phase-out_of_incandescent_light_bulbs
Re: the type of light they give off. Well, I have one Cadex bulb (similar to the Edison bulb) in my apartment and it gives off a soft, golden glow, but is more suited to creating atmosphere than task lighting. That said, a group of say six or so would cummulatively provide much stronger light.
The Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 (EISA 2007) is the law related to the "phaseout" of incandescent light bulbs. It technically doesn't ban standard incandescent light bulbs - it simply sets new standards in efficiency. Today's 100 watt A-line light bulb will no longer be on the marketplace come January 2012 because it does not meet the standards. However, there are a number of comparable replacements available.
Basically, the law was designed to reduce energy usage and greenhouse gas emissions by pushing lighting manufacturers to come up with more innovative products that deliver the same quality of light but use less energy to do it.
In July, there was a Republican-sponsored bill seeking to eliminate the portion of EISA 2007 that requires incandescent light bulbs to be 25-30 percent more efficient. However, that bill did not pass in the House of Representatives.
Shortly after that Republican-sponsored bill did not pass, another amendment to EISA 2007 was introduced that DID pass. The amendment denies funding to implement the federal light bulb efficiency standards.
Right now, the future of the incandescent "phaseout" is a little unclear. The law still calls for more efficient light bulbs, but the funding to implement them has been denied.
Here's the latest on the political pulls regarding this topic: http://blog.pegasuslighting.com/2011/07/political-pulls-with-energy-efficient-lighting/
Also, for an overview of EISA 2007, check out these blog posts ... I wrote a series explaining the changes:
http://blog.pegasuslighting.com/2011/03/truth-lies-the-incandescent-phase-out-part-1/
http://blog.pegasuslighting.com/2011/03/the-fine-print-explained-the-incandescent-phase-out-part-2/
http://blog.pegasuslighting.com/2011/03/the-inclusions-exceptions-the-incandescent-phase-out-part-3/
http://blog.pegasuslighting.com/2011/03/the-replacement-contenders-the-incandescent-phase-out-part-4/
http://blog.pegasuslighting.com/2011/03/the-expected-impact-the-incandescent-phase-out-part-5/
Hope that helps make things a little more clear!
--Valerie