[Nhcoll-l] LED lights in collections
Susan Maltby
susan.maltby at utoronto.ca
Thu Jan 23 15:17:15 EST 2025
Further to Dee's message, there is also the Getty's Guidelines for Selecting Solid-State Lighting for Museums (https://www.getty.edu/conservation/publications_resources/pdf_publications/guidelines-solid-state-lighting.html). The C2C Care: How to Change a Lightbulb: LED Lighting for Museums presentation (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T0QVAOfrJQI) is also a good primer.
Sue Maltby, Conservator, IIC Fellow
Maltby & Associates Inc.
Adjunct Professor, Museum Studies Program/Faculty of Information, University of Toronto
174 Spadina Ave., #508
Toronto, Ontario
M5T 2C2
________________________________
From: Nhcoll-l <nhcoll-l-bounces at mailman.yale.edu> on behalf of Dee Stubbs-Lee <Dee.Stubbs-Lee at nbm-mnb.ca>
Sent: Thursday, January 23, 2025 2:28 PM
To: Callomon,Paul <prc44 at drexel.edu>; Angela Hornsby <horns076 at umn.edu>; nhcoll-l at mailman.yale.edu <nhcoll-l at mailman.yale.edu>
Subject: Re: [Nhcoll-l] LED lights in collections
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Hi Angela,
The Canadian Conservation Institute has a technical bulletin on LED lighting that might be helpful if you haven't seen it.
Here's the link:
LED Lighting in Museums and Art Galleries – Technical Bulletin 36 - Canada.ca<https://www.canada.ca/en/conservation-institute/services/conservation-preservation-publications/technical-bulletins/led-lighting-museums.html>
Dee Stubbs-Lee
Conservator
New Brunswick Museum
________________________________
From: Nhcoll-l <nhcoll-l-bounces at mailman.yale.edu> on behalf of Callomon,Paul <prc44 at drexel.edu>
Sent: Thursday, January 23, 2025 2:38 PM
To: Angela Hornsby; nhcoll-l at mailman.yale.edu
Subject: Re: [Nhcoll-l] LED lights in collections
Changing to LEDs makes sense in many ways. They consume a fraction of the energy used by incandescent or even fluorescent bulbs, and do not get anywhere near as hot. Both factors reduce stress on older light fixtures and thus the danger of sparking. They do not have ballasts, unlike fluorescents, and are a straight swap-out.
The only possible issue is that their color temperature tends to be higher than that of incandescents. Some LED bulbs can be configured to “cool” or “warm” modes with a switch, but most are set at the factory. Cool LEDs can change the visual perception of colors in exhibits and shared spaces, though that can also be good – many dioramas and specimen displays look better with higher color temperature lighting, and up to now that has often been achieved with halogen bulbs that get very hot indeed and eat a lot of power.
One caveat is that the optimistic durability figures many makers give – “lasts seven years!” are just that, optimistic. These bulbs are almost all made in China and to keep the price down, the QC is not all it might be. I’ve had them fail or start flickering (which can’t be fixed) in less than a year in some cases.
Paul Callomon
Collection Manager, Malacology and General Invertebrates
________________________________
Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University, Philadelphia
callomon at ansp.org<mailto:callomon at ansp.org> Tel 215-405-5096 - Fax 215-299-1170
From: Nhcoll-l <nhcoll-l-bounces at mailman.yale.edu> On Behalf Of Angela Hornsby
Sent: Thursday, January 23, 2025 1:29 PM
To: nhcoll-l at mailman.yale.edu
Subject: [Nhcoll-l] LED lights in collections
External.
Hi everyone,
Our campus facilities management would like to change all of our general lighting in non-public collections spaces (dry and wet) to LEDs. I haven't found any sources suggesting major negatives (e.g., https://www.nps.gov/museum/publications/mhi/chap4.pdf).
Does anyone have experience with the change to LEDs, particularly any unanticipated effects?
Thanks,
Angela
--
Angela Hornsby, Ph.D. (she)
Zoological Collections Manager (MMNH / JFBM)
Bell Museum
University of Minnesota
https://www.bellmuseum.umn.edu/zoological-collections/
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