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TLPC
Tlpc have created Solar panel lighting and signage for illumination that is,
cost effective, energy efficient, environmentally friendly and 99% maintenance
free.
Designing with
Coloured Light
Colour is a significant component of visual perception. It cannot be perceived
without daylight or artificial lighting. LED and fibre optic lighting allows a
multitude of design possibilities for emphasising or altering the lighting
effect of rooms and objects with colored light. The term "colour of light"
covers both white and coloured light. Warm white, neutral white and daylight
white are derived from the white colour of light. The colored light covers the
entire visible spectrum.
Compared to the primary colours yellow, blue and red, the colours amber and
magenta appear weaker in their expressiveness. Yellow and red colours of light
create a warm atmosphere in a room. Blue colours of light allow a room to give a
cooler impression.
Compared to the primary colours yellow, blue and red, the colours amber and
magenta appear weaker in their expressiveness. Yellow and red colours of light
create a warm atmosphere in a room. Blue colours of light allow a room to give a
cooler impression.
LED Effect Lighting
LED Effect
Lighting Videos
Fibre
Optic Lighting
Energy & Costs Savings
LED Bulbs
Light Power
LED FAQ
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Architectural Effect Lighting
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Architectural Effect Lighting
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Architectural Effect Lighting
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Architectural Effect Lighting
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Architectural Effect Lighting
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Architectural Effect Lighting
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Architectural Effect Lighting
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Architectural Effect Lighting
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Architectural Effect Lighting
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Blue Effect LED Lighting
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Green Effect LED Lighting
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Pink Effect LED Lighting
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Colour Mixing
The RGB colour space is an additive colour model. The graphic shown here
demonstrates this mixing of primary colours (red, green, and blue/violet). When
combined in equal amounts, the additive primary colours produce white. Lighting,
video, monitors and film recorders all use the additive colour model to
represent colour. The human eye is based upon RGB colour; the eye has red, green
and blue receptors whose signals are interpreted as colour by the brain. The
primary colours are different for the computer RGB colour space than for the
subtractive colour space.
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