I still remember when they were giving away those florescent bulbs when they were weeding out the old incandescent bulbs. Everything the government does always seems to be to make us sick.
I used to live in Venezuela by that time and I clearly remember when the government sent people door by door giving fluorescent bulbs for free, I think it was 12 per house hold.
That's the first time I've learned that there is mercury in tattoos. Now I'm really glad I never got any. This video is brilliant. I wish more people would understand the importance of natural light for your body and mental health.
Honestly what the hell, no, tattoo ink no longer carries mercury. Maybe it did half a century ago or in some underground or undeveloped market. And if mercury light emission from a mercury bulb could excitate mercury in your skin, so could.. the Sun, or a candle, or any black body radiation for that matter.
Incandescent light bulbs are still my favorites: they emit the most pleasing light on the eye. I grew up in the light of such lamps. Even LED bulbs with warm light cannot be compared to incandescent bulbs in terms of comfort. In my apartment, there are cold fluorescent lamps on the ceiling. If I turn them on in the evenings, then I begin to experience stress, and with daily use - even depression. And yesterday I took an ordinary desk lamp, into which a 60 W incandescent bulb is screwed, put it on the cupboard - and immediately the situation changed dramatically for the better. The warm analogue light from an incandescent lamp is very relaxing for me. Today I want to go to the store and buy a 95 W incandescent lamp (if available in the store).
@@Aem640 You can't find incandescent or halogens anymore because the Biden DOE banned them this summer. I too prefer halogens/incandesents because they are easier on the eyes and don't have a noticeable flicker.
Where can I buy several of the GE Reveal incandescent bulbs in 40 & 60 watt? I am vision impaired & these are the only bulbs that do not hurt my eyes & give me bad headaches. So the reason people are having more heavy metal in thier blood tests is because of fluorescent light exposure, thank you for this information
Thankyou that was brilliant, haha no seriously I was looking for info on frequency emitted from the newer globes,and not disappointed I stumbled onto your video. Thanks again.
I've been trying my hardest to find the right "smart bulb". I think this is the perfect feature for a smart bulb, but I don't have the expertise to determine which ones are the best. Everywhere I've read, I've seen that 2000k @ 350 Lumens is ideal for night time, but I haven't been able to find any that I trust to produce that in the evening. One of the biggest gaps in reviews that I've found is a review of the spectrum produced by the bulbs. It's nearly impossible to find anywhere that has tested the blue light levels of Smart Bulbs. If you know of any, please let me know! I'd love to get some full-spectrum bulbs that produce daylight temperature but can still produce healthy night time lighting. If you know of any, please let me know! And thanks for the video! This is fantastic!
@@illuminatinghealth765 Also, LED, Halogen, fluorescent bulbs are intolerable to people with sensory disabilities with heightened senses, such as autism.
If you live in a high latitude country and sunset is at 4pm. Would it be best to put red lights on in the evening? I was thinking what if I have UV full spectrum bulbs on till 6pm, and then use red lights till 10pm and blue blocking glasses that would be okay, hmmmm. It's tricky
With regard to incandescent bulbs, does the colour have an impact on your health. I am curious which colour would be the best for my new home, regarding the heathiest colour for the bathroom, bedroom, kitchen and small office and home gym.
Halogens are ok with respect to dirty electricity, but too bright for night time use. For incandescents It can be easier to find low wattage "party style", or even just buy the tiny incandescents meant to go inside of the salt lamps!
Been doing it for years without a problem... you just need to adjust.. our ancestors did it! Honestly I find olive oil lamps and candles to feel better at night than the light bulbs, but my family likes the light bulbs better.
Thank you Ollie! Incandescent lights should be fine for eyesight - not dangerous like fluorescents or incandescents - but will deplete your melatonin if used at night (outside of a salt lamp or other appropriate shielding)
This is an absolutely awesome video. No wonder I don’t feel super great. I’m going to tear out a dangerous LED light and change it to a Chromalux Incandescent light blub it’s also more efficient than a other incandescent light blub too
It might be helpful in addition to blue-blocking (and green blocking glasses, if possible - perhaps try glasses with a yellow or orange tint?) to block the excessive blue/green light from office light bulbs. Placing filters over lights has also been shown to be very effective: glarminy.com/2016/06/15/eye-strain-headache-fluorescent-light/ Let me know what you try and how it goes !
Here's my video on lights of other colors th-cam.com/video/cK0tG8kJmDY/w-d-xo.html I cover green spefically in this video; I would veer away from pink light because pink requires mixing in white or purple light, which will both contain high frequencies.
There's a nice paper here that gives the spectral frequencies for all kinds of lightbulbs: www.researchgate.net/publication/223137703_Spectral_Identification_of_Lighting_Type_and_Character. High pressure sodium is discussed on pp 3975 & 3976. These lamps contain some mercury, so that will be reflected in the spectrum, but at least there is not much blue light (although still some). Most of it is green/yellow/orange. So these lamps are not as acutely damaging to melatonin production, but if they're bright the green light can still be problematic at night (see this video: th-cam.com/video/cK0tG8kJmDY/w-d-xo.html). If you have one right outside your window (streetlamp) it's best to block it. Metal halide lights (p. 3974) contain mercury and variable spectra, depending on the lamp. Usually there is some blue and a decent amount of green, so potentially ok for night time if kept very dim, but not ideal due to the green content.
I agree incandescent are the healthier but they flicker with the net freq. You can simple check it with your camera pointing at them with different freq that your net. An incandescent ligth feeded with DC would have the healthiest emision with less flickering, just some oscilation due to the output of a dc signal. If you feed them with a batery that would the best. I am surprised that there is no solution like that. I would love to have a lamp pluged into the net with a ac/dc converter. The oscilating DC output would feed a baterry that stays charged, and the battery could feed the ligth bulb in a perfectly and continuous manner.
Excellent point, but unfortunately, AC/DC converters produce significant magnetic fields that aren't healthy either. Olive oil lamps are honestly the best solution (I have a video on making them), but the light bulbs recommended here are the next best bet -
Just off the look and feel alone, I don't know how anyone could enjoy the lighting off these harsh LED bulbs. So fake and artificial, cold feeling. Incandescent lighting has a much more "homey" feeling. It's a lot warmer.
Thank you for your comment! But I would be very careful about using a therapy light panel for regular evening lighting. These are very focused at frequencies which affect the mitochondria and overexposure (usually more than 20 minutes, depending on the distance between yourself and your lights) can actually be detrimental for mitochondrial health. A plain red light or incubator light would be safer.
Absolutely, but unfortunately when you're limited to LED bulbs these cool colors will do eye damage.. see my video on the hidden hazards of energy efficient light bulbs. Use lighting through windows when you can -
You need to take it to hazardous waste/e-waste disposal. Usually your city will have a collection site or collection days. Thanks so much for being responsible !
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You can buy incadescent bulb and use it with a dimmer. By dimming it you not only (obviously) reduce the light intensity, but also get rid of blue and green spectrum. Nothing comes closes to using incadescent bulb with a dimmer.
Thanks for writing, Jakub! The unfortunate bummer here is that dimmer switches work by flickering the light on and off very quickly. This creates high amounts of "dirty electricity", just like running a fluorescent bulb. You can test your dimmer switch for dirty electricity with an AM radio tuned to static, like I do in the video with the fluorescent. When you turn the dimmer on, you should hear the frequencies through the radio. Dirty electricity has been potentially tied to blood sugar irregularity and other problems.
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@@illuminatinghealth765 Interesting, I'll do some research on that. Do all dimmers work like this?
I can see the diffence with regular LED and incondecent lights easily. I don't like the light LED give off, it always seems too "sharp" even with the warm yellow ones. I was totally fooled when I saw a retro LED the first time. Totally mimicks the regular bulb. Nice to get confirmation. I think the trick is the retro ones have a lot more suface area and glow more gently where as regular LED's are usually really small and glow really bright to compensate for their size.
Interesting! I heard LED light bulbs can hurt the eyes. I have LED light for my home use. I'm currently using 65W LED light bulb for my living room. Is that harmful. Thank you.
If it is a standard LED that has a color temperature > 2200K it is certainly harmful at night as far as suppressing melatonin; during the day I do not know whether a single bulb of that intensity would cause problems as far as skin and eye damage or not. Opening windows to allow natural lighting into the room during the day would help to cancel out negative effects. Check out my video on the health hazards of energy efficient light bulbs. Thank you for your interest !
Incandescent light is banned in Denmark but I want to buy some... Can't believe I need to go underground just to buy freaking incandescent light...
Are you still able to find & buy incandescent bulbs? where?, I need some
Flea market?
Amazon
I still remember when they were giving away those florescent bulbs when they were weeding out the old incandescent bulbs. Everything the government does always seems to be to make us sick.
including the COVID-19 vaccine
@Last Days Light next up, according to Schwab is to "REFORMAT the Internet"
then next will be food, and resources.
I used to live in Venezuela by that time and I clearly remember when the government sent people door by door giving fluorescent bulbs for free, I think it was 12 per house hold.
Dee
Pop
You
Lay
Shun
It’s real
And it’s here.
@@luciano8822 price was probably $0.25 per item :)
That's the first time I've learned that there is mercury in tattoos. Now I'm really glad I never got any.
This video is brilliant. I wish more people would understand the importance of natural light for your body and mental health.
thank you so much!
@@illuminatinghealth765 I think the LED, halogen & fluorescent bulbs are part of a depopulation agenda
Honestly what the hell, no, tattoo ink no longer carries mercury. Maybe it did half a century ago or in some underground or undeveloped market. And if mercury light emission from a mercury bulb could excitate mercury in your skin, so could.. the Sun, or a candle, or any black body radiation for that matter.
Incandescent light bulbs are still my favorites: they emit the most pleasing light on the eye. I grew up in the light of such lamps. Even LED bulbs with warm light cannot be compared to incandescent bulbs in terms of comfort. In my apartment, there are cold fluorescent lamps on the ceiling. If I turn them on in the evenings, then I begin to experience stress, and with daily use - even depression. And yesterday I took an ordinary desk lamp, into which a 60 W incandescent bulb is screwed, put it on the cupboard - and immediately the situation changed dramatically for the better. The warm analogue light from an incandescent lamp is very relaxing for me. Today I want to go to the store and buy a 95 W incandescent lamp (if available in the store).
;)
if you don;t care about something else than yourself, use the old tech.
I can’t even find them anymore everything is LED!
@@Aem640 You can't find incandescent or halogens anymore because the Biden DOE banned them this summer. I too prefer halogens/incandesents because they are easier on the eyes and don't have a noticeable flicker.
@@enkidu001 the newer tech it is the more toxic & unsafe than old tech, old stuff was made bette, more reliable & lasts longer
What about a plant growing light what kind of health effects does this have?
Just what I needed! Concise and packed with helpful information!
True
This is an excellent video, exactly what I was searching for! Hope you have a great day!
thank you, so much appreciated!
Anything to help with my tinnitus. Thanks
Thank you for this content . Glad to know I’m not the only one thinking about lights and my health ❤
Where can I buy several of the GE Reveal incandescent bulbs in 40 & 60 watt? I am vision impaired & these are the only bulbs that do not hurt my eyes & give me bad headaches. So the reason people are having more heavy metal in thier blood tests is because of fluorescent light exposure, thank you for this information
Thankyou that was brilliant, haha no seriously I was looking for info on frequency emitted from the newer globes,and not disappointed I stumbled onto your video. Thanks again.
;) thank you so much for your kindness!
Bravo! Well done. Just the facts. Good suggestions too. Thank you
I've been trying my hardest to find the right "smart bulb". I think this is the perfect feature for a smart bulb, but I don't have the expertise to determine which ones are the best. Everywhere I've read, I've seen that 2000k @ 350 Lumens is ideal for night time, but I haven't been able to find any that I trust to produce that in the evening. One of the biggest gaps in reviews that I've found is a review of the spectrum produced by the bulbs. It's nearly impossible to find anywhere that has tested the blue light levels of Smart Bulbs.
If you know of any, please let me know! I'd love to get some full-spectrum bulbs that produce daylight temperature but can still produce healthy night time lighting.
If you know of any, please let me know!
And thanks for the video! This is fantastic!
Good video but you forgot one important aspect: Pwm flicker
Excellent point... should do a new show on that. Thank you!
@@illuminatinghealth765 Also, LED, Halogen, fluorescent bulbs are intolerable to people with sensory disabilities with heightened senses, such as autism.
You are awesome! Thank you very much. Just ordered the Amber dim light bulb!
If you live in a high latitude country and sunset is at 4pm.
Would it be best to put red lights on in the evening?
I was thinking what if I have UV full spectrum bulbs on till 6pm, and then use red lights till 10pm and blue blocking glasses that would be okay, hmmmm.
It's tricky
The bright lights shouldn't negatively effect your circadian rhythm if you only use them during daytime, correct?
What is the name and brand of the Himalayan crystal lamp in this video?
With regard to incandescent bulbs, does the colour have an impact on your health.
I am curious which colour would be the best for my new home, regarding the heathiest colour for the bathroom, bedroom, kitchen and small office and home gym.
Very very valuable.. Thankyou so much..
Thank you for educating us 👍🏼
Thank you so much for this clear and to the point video!
What about the halogen lamps; Are they produce dirty electricity; These days is very difficult to find incandescent bulbs.
Halogens are ok with respect to dirty electricity, but too bright for night time use. For incandescents It can be easier to find low wattage "party style", or even just buy the tiny incandescents meant to go inside of the salt lamps!
Thank you for this video. I really liked the content.
I have a red infrared light panel , I'm wondering if I put this on at night would that affect melatonin?
Incandescents are not sold anymore, I used to buy them, though
Any health light bulbs around 1700Kelvin?
this was so helpful thank you
Thank you so much!
Good scientific analysis
thank you - much appreciated!
Thanks ma'am, it was awesome
thank you so much for your support !
That was fantastic. Thank you
How are you going to read and cook when it is so dark? That would be straining for the eyes too
Been doing it for years without a problem... you just need to adjust.. our ancestors did it! Honestly I find olive oil lamps and candles to feel better at night than the light bulbs, but my family likes the light bulbs better.
Hello i enjoy your videos, my concern is, are incandecent light to dark that could spoil eyesight?
Thank you Ollie! Incandescent lights should be fine for eyesight - not dangerous like fluorescents or incandescents - but will deplete your melatonin if used at night (outside of a salt lamp or other appropriate shielding)
Wow amazing video! Carbide light next!
Great information thank you very much
Thank you so much!
thank you so much!
This is an absolutely awesome video. No wonder I don’t feel super great. I’m going to tear out a dangerous LED light and change it to a Chromalux Incandescent light blub it’s also more efficient than a other incandescent light blub too
Are the salt lights a good option to counter the effects of office fluorescent light bulbs? My eyes go blurry after a few hours in the office.
It might be helpful in addition to blue-blocking (and green blocking glasses, if possible - perhaps try glasses with a yellow or orange tint?) to block the excessive blue/green light from office light bulbs. Placing filters over lights has also been shown to be very effective: glarminy.com/2016/06/15/eye-strain-headache-fluorescent-light/ Let me know what you try and how it goes !
What about pink, green, etc. colored lights?. I know people use pink lights in their homes and green because they are supposed to be more calming.
Here's my video on lights of other colors th-cam.com/video/cK0tG8kJmDY/w-d-xo.html I cover green spefically in this video; I would veer away from pink light because pink requires mixing in white or purple light, which will both contain high frequencies.
Thank you for making this video !
What about high-pressure sodium or metal halide
There's a nice paper here that gives the spectral frequencies for all kinds of lightbulbs: www.researchgate.net/publication/223137703_Spectral_Identification_of_Lighting_Type_and_Character. High pressure sodium is discussed on pp 3975 & 3976. These lamps contain some mercury, so that will be reflected in the spectrum, but at least there is not much blue light (although still some). Most of it is green/yellow/orange. So these lamps are not as acutely damaging to melatonin production, but if they're bright the green light can still be problematic at night (see this video: th-cam.com/video/cK0tG8kJmDY/w-d-xo.html). If you have one right outside your window (streetlamp) it's best to block it. Metal halide lights (p. 3974) contain mercury and variable spectra, depending on the lamp. Usually there is some blue and a decent amount of green, so potentially ok for night time if kept very dim, but not ideal due to the green content.
I never understood why different lighting has different effect on me in different parts of the night and day.
I agree incandescent are the healthier but they flicker with the net freq. You can simple check it with your camera pointing at them with different freq that your net. An incandescent ligth feeded with DC would have the healthiest emision with less flickering, just some oscilation due to the output of a dc signal. If you feed them with a batery that would the best. I am surprised that there is no solution like that. I would love to have a lamp pluged into the net with a ac/dc converter. The oscilating DC output would feed a baterry that stays charged, and the battery could feed the ligth bulb in a perfectly and continuous manner.
Excellent point, but unfortunately, AC/DC converters produce significant magnetic fields that aren't healthy either. Olive oil lamps are honestly the best solution (I have a video on making them), but the light bulbs recommended here are the next best bet -
Maybe I'm misunderstanding. Are you suggesting that the filament is pulsating at 60 × second? If so I don't think that's even possible.
Just off the look and feel alone, I don't know how anyone could enjoy the lighting off these harsh LED bulbs. So fake and artificial, cold feeling. Incandescent lighting has a much more "homey" feeling. It's a lot warmer.
With the salt lamps, I have found the one I have has tonnes of pf Dirty ELectricity. Is it the brand thats an issue?
look into the bulb, are you using CFL light inside the salt?
Agreed - open the salt lamp and check the bulb. An incandescent should not have dirty electricity. thanks for watching!
Thank you
thank you!
Thank you so much.
Thank you so much for the help 😊
Nice job! Loved this vid!
thank you so much!
Try a Therapy light panel at 10,000K . At dusk red led lights are dreamy .
or GE Reveal and PHILIPS LED A19 Ultra Definition Frosted
Thank you for your comment! But I would be very careful about using a therapy light panel for regular evening lighting. These are very focused at frequencies which affect the mitochondria and overexposure (usually more than 20 minutes, depending on the distance between yourself and your lights) can actually be detrimental for mitochondrial health. A plain red light or incubator light would be safer.
Thank you ma'am
2000k ? Maybe to falling asleep, but for dailyroom 2700-2900 eventually 3200 (most expensive to mfg)
Absolutely, but unfortunately when you're limited to LED bulbs these cool colors will do eye damage.. see my video on the hidden hazards of energy efficient light bulbs. Use lighting through windows when you can -
What about a red heat lamp.
Fine for limited periods of time.. see th-cam.com/video/RNzF4qbLdx0/w-d-xo.html
So if a light bulb has mercury in it, it should not be used? If not, how do you safely dispose of it?
You need to take it to hazardous waste/e-waste disposal. Usually your city will have a collection site or collection days. Thanks so much for being responsible !
You can buy incadescent bulb and use it with a dimmer. By dimming it you not only (obviously) reduce the light intensity, but also get rid of blue and green spectrum. Nothing comes closes to using incadescent bulb with a dimmer.
Thanks for writing, Jakub! The unfortunate bummer here is that dimmer switches work by flickering the light on and off very quickly. This creates high amounts of "dirty electricity", just like running a fluorescent bulb. You can test your dimmer switch for dirty electricity with an AM radio tuned to static, like I do in the video with the fluorescent. When you turn the dimmer on, you should hear the frequencies through the radio. Dirty electricity has been potentially tied to blood sugar irregularity and other problems.
@@illuminatinghealth765 Interesting, I'll do some research on that. Do all dimmers work like this?
As far as I know they all work like this but if you find out differently I'd love to hear about it!
Too late to know the truth, I'll prefer incandescent lighting & candle lights, thanks for the info !!!!!
thank you so much!
Hey light head! Hey Christmas tree!
awesome ! ! !
I can see the diffence with regular LED and incondecent lights easily. I don't like the light LED give off, it always seems too "sharp" even with the warm yellow ones.
I was totally fooled when I saw a retro LED the first time. Totally mimicks the regular bulb. Nice to get confirmation.
I think the trick is the retro ones have a lot more suface area and glow more gently where as regular LED's are usually really small and glow really bright to compensate for their size.
thank you for your comment !
I love you!
Interesting! I heard LED light bulbs can hurt the eyes. I have LED light for my home use. I'm currently using 65W LED light bulb for my living room. Is that harmful. Thank you.
If it is a standard LED that has a color temperature > 2200K it is certainly harmful at night as far as suppressing melatonin; during the day I do not know whether a single bulb of that intensity would cause problems as far as skin and eye damage or not. Opening windows to allow natural lighting into the room during the day would help to cancel out negative effects. Check out my video on the health hazards of energy efficient light bulbs. Thank you for your interest !
Y'all need to get better sources for your "scientific" and health information, for your own sakes.
thanks, naver though this could be harmful
✌✌✌✌
Thank you