Does your living room have lights?

10 Jun.,2024

 

Does your living room have lights?

Post by phil » Fri Jul 08, 7:46 pm

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while Im doing my living room, I could add lights to the ceiling. Part of me wants to but then maybe not having them reflects upon the heritage look and gives me reason for a few free standing ones. I have enough plugs, I rewired, I can add them if I want but I'm not sure if adding them is really a bonus or if it just takes away from the heritage aspect. my bedrooms had lights, but my living room never had them.

I did add a three way switch that controls two outlets, one on either side of the bay window. if I added ceiling lights I'd just wire into that so the switch would turn on both outlets and the ceiling lights..

both outlets are in receptacles with two outlets so I made them it so one outlet isn't switched and one is, that way I can plug stuff in that I don't want switched on the top outlet and one that is switched on the bottom outlet. I have lots more outlets so I don't need more of those, and the wiring is simple If I do want them. especially now with the walls open.

So I wondered how many here had lights in the living room originally? would you add them if they didn't' exist?

A quick history of domestic lighting - Lucy Worsley

A quick history of domestic lighting

The history of domestic lighting has been governed by economics, but also by snobbery and tradition, and occasionally by a dangerous desire for novelty.

As &#;If Walls Could Talk&#; is being repeated on the TV at the moment, I thought you might enjoy a quick history of domestic lighting. Yawn, what a dull subject, you might think! But just think about life without electricity.  One of the biggest changes in domestic life ever must have been the moment when the lights came on in the late nineteenth century.  Before that, people must have had a cat-like ability to manage in low light levels.

For centuries, rushlights were the poor person&#;s light-source of choice.  You make them by repeatedly coating a rush in hot fat, building up the layers to create a rather scrawny candle.  These long, gently-curving lights were balanced in special holders.  To double the illumination, you could ignite both top and bottom (&#;burning the candle at both ends&#;).

The expression &#;the game&#;s not worth the candle&#; makes it clear that lighting a candle felt like burning money itself.  The twenty minutes for which one rushlight lasted was a familiar unit of time, and had to be exploited to the maximum.  A housewife might have invited village neighbours over to share a rushlight for an interval of hurried darning.

Only the rich could afford a profusion of beeswax candles.  In large households, a daily ration of candles was often included in employment conditions, and the fate of candle-ends was hotly disputed: they were the preserve of senior servants, who&#;d sell them on to supplement their wages.

Yet there was another, cheaper alternative.  The tallow candle was made from animal fat, ideally sheep or cow, because &#;that of hogs &#; gives an ill smell, and a thick black smoke&#;.  The art of creating the longest-lasting blend was very valuable, and in tallow chandlery was listed among the foremost crafts of London.  Tallow candles had a horrible brown colour and made a dreadful meaty stink.  Despite this, desperate people would eat them in times of famine for the calories they contained.

Apart from the unpleasant smell, the great drawback to tallow candles was the need to snuff.  Their wicks had to be trimmed every few minutes or they smoked.  And, in an age of candles, fire-light and timber-framed houses, accidents were common.  Once in seventeenth-century London a servant named Obadiah illicitly took a candle up to his bedchamber.  There it fell over and burnt &#;half a yard of the sheet&#;.  But the quick-thinking Obadiah woke a fellow servant, and together they &#;pissed out the fire as well as they could&#;.

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Interiors lit by candle-light were designed to magnify the limited light available.  The Hall of Mirrors at Versailles was the first room in history to be illuminated to something approaching the light-levels we&#;d find safe and pleasant today.  Its ubiquitous glass reflected candle-light so effectively that the French court began for the first time to hold regular evening parties.

In prosperous Georgian drawing rooms there was likewise silver or sparkle everywhere.  The gold rims of plates, the silver of keyholes, even the metallic embroidery on waistcoats: all were intended to aid the eye and maximise candlelight.  In fact, a lady&#;s silver dress had the effect of making its wearer gleam.

The light, bright colours of Georgian interiors would be replaced by rich, dark hues in the Victorian age.  Deeper tones helped hide the soot produced by oil lamps, which began to replace candles in the later eighteenth century.  &#;I have seen houses almost filled with the smoke from lamps, and the stench of the oil&#;, one footman recollected.  In grand houses, lamps required a new room for the cleaning of their glass shades.  The Duke of Rutland at Belvoir Castle had a trifling 400 for his hard-working servants to polish.

Yet the oil lamp would soon be superseded by gas, which made its appearance in factories, theatres and street-lighting long before it penetrated the home.  Today our gas is natural, piped from pockets beneath the sea.  It burns much more brightly than the baked coal gas used between late Georgian times and the s.

Gas made its debut in London when an entrepreneur named Frederick Windsor organised a public demonstration of the new lighting for George III&#;s birthday in .  People both marvelled at and feared the properties of this &#;illuminated air&#;.  Windsor reassured potential clients that gas is even &#;more congenial to our lungs than vital air&#;.

By the s, gas began to make a tentative appearance in the urban home.  Gradually it became a middle-class must-have.  A contributor to the Englishwoman&#;s Domestic Magazine even recommended that parties &#;must always be given by gas light &#; if it be daylight outside, you must close the shutters and draw the curtains&#;, the better to show off your gasoliers.

Gas must have provided a quite stunning improvement to people&#;s ability to read, write or sew in the evenings with minimal effort.  It nevertheless had many drawbacks.  There were frequent explosions, and it replaced the oxygen in the air with black and noxious deposits.  The aspidistra, a hugely popular plant, became so because it survived well in oxygen-starved conditions.  Victorian ladies frequently fainted partly because of tight-lacing, but also because of a lack of oxygen in their gas-lit drawing rooms.

The arrival of electricity in the s caused a stir.  It was immensely expensive and therefore terribly chic.  A light bulb cost the same as the average week&#;s wages, and you needed your own home generator.  Several Fifth Avenue millionaires installed generators in their houses in s New York, and Mrs Cornelius Vanderbilt even went to a costume ball as Electric Light.  But these early adopters ran the risk of accidents.  After her electrical system caught fire Mrs Vanderbilt panicked and had it taken out.

The widespread adoption of electricity was delayed for many years because each generator had a different output.  So different towns had different currents, and manufacturers were reluctant to develop light fittings because there was no national market for their products.  Not until the National Grid was created in the s did electricity achieve ubiquity.

Of course this bright white light was enormously convenient, but once electricity had vanquished the night, we lost something significant: the art of entertaining ourselves in low light levels.  Conversation, singing and storytelling were all the casualties of modern technology.

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