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Natural LIGHT FROM ROOM

Home and garden   |  May 8th 2011   |  0 Comment

Things you’ll need:

  1. access to the fuse box for the socket you’re working in so you can shut off the power when you fiddle. The light switch alone is not enough. 220 or 120 volts is nothing to mess with.
  2. jars with lids that screw tight
  3. energy saver bulbs that will fit inside said jars
  4. awl
  5. wire cutter
  6. electrician’s screwdriver
  7. electrician’s cable cutters/splicers
  8. raw cable
  9. bulb connectors*
  10. ceiling hook
  11. cable hook thingies*
  12. electrical connector pieces*
  13. decorative casing(s) for the ceiling

* I barely remember what these were in German, let alone know what they are in English, so you’ll have to look at the pictures to see what I mean. This is where this becomes a ‘sorta’ tutorial. I take no responsibility for your safety, so check with a trained electrician.

IMPORTANT: because the bulb is essentially encased in a thick glass jar and lid, there is no way for the heat generated to escape. This is why energy saver bulbs are essential. They generate far less heat than a regular bulb. You wouldn’t want a jar shattering everywhere!

We first used our wire cutter to cut the large center hole in the jar lid. This will be where our bulb and it’s connector will go through. Our bulb connector had two rings you could tighten on either side of the lid. Some will just be bigger on the inside of the jar to keep the jar/shade from falling off the bulb.
We then used an awl to punch ventilation holes in the lid. This was deemed optional, but we wanted to be extra safe. Because the lamps hang so far from the ceiling to be near the table, we don’t see a ring of speckled lights on the ceiling (which I was actually hoping for, but whatever).
Now it gets a little tricky. There’s some stuff going on inside the bulb connector’s casing to get the white raw cable connected. I didn’t get a picture of that. We had this explained to us by the salesperson in the hardware store. I didn’t understand the technical German. She apparently forgot to sell us one piece, so when it didn’t work, our friend, Eric, told us what to get. So you’re on your own for this part.
Because we had 3 lamps (1 wasn’t bright enough and 2 looked stupid somehow), we had to get them connected to meet the one connection point in the ceiling. This is where you need the electrician’s cable cutters to shave off the casing of your raw cable and connect the insides to a sharing box that is then connected to the ceiling lines. Before you connect everybody, first slide the decorative cover on, then slide on cable hook holder thingies (see picture) to each pendant’s cable. Screw a little hook into the ceiling right where you want your pendants to hang from. The hook will carry the weight of your pendants. Slide the cover up over all the hook and electrical gadgetry and you’re finished!
We had to cut a wider hole in the bigger decorative cover to accommodate the three pendant cables. You’ll notice we actually have 2 covers on the ceiling. This was because our ceiling connection wasn’t centered over our table. The little cover just has the basic ceiling connection in it. The bigger one is to hold all the other stuff from 3 pendant cables, hook, etc.

The only thing I don’t like about our project is that the energy saver bulbs cast a blue-ish light when it’s dark out and we don’t have enough natural light to counterbalance. I’m not sure if bulbs are made that don’t do that, but if so, we don’t have them in our area of Germany. I suppose you could paint the jars with a thin coat of paint to offset this, but it doesn’t bother us that much. I would also wonder about any off-gassing of paint that close to a heat source.

Now to get a real cushion on the bench and some art on the walls!

 



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