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Outdoor solar lights are bright ideas for exterior illumination. Find out how these energy-saving lights work and the many types that can make your nights shine.
Outdoor solar lights were some of the first alternative-energy products to gain a mass-market foothold. Today, sunlight-powered fixtures are flooding the landscape and garden lighting market.
How solar lights work
Solar lights have three main components:
The upside of outdoor solar lights
The downside
Outdoor solar lights don’t really have a lot of downsides. However, if you live in a cloudy climate, or if you’ve just experienced a long haul of rainy and overcast weather, the brightness and longevity of the lighting may be affected.
Also, solar lights cost more at the outset because they’re complex and have expensive components.
Types of outdoor solar lighting
String lights come in various lengths, such as 25 and 50 feet, and usually have 2-6 bulbs per foot, depending on the manufacturer. There are many styles, colors, and sizes of bulbs to choose. They’ve become popular as Christmas lights, but you can use them to light up your outdoor living spaces all year round.
You should know: Solar string lights don’t need regular household electrical current, but they’re attached by wire to a small solar panel — make sure the panel has access to as much sunlight as possible.
Cost:$20-$40 for a 25-foot strand.
Border and driveway lights illuminate walkways and the edges of driveways for safety and convenience.
Glowing globes are spherical sun-powered lamps that make chic architectural additions to your landscape lighting scheme. Stake them in your yard, float them in your pool or make them border beacons — no matter, you’ll enjoy the glowing-orb goodness.
You should know: Color-changing globe lights have three modes: off, “color mode” (which cycles through the spectrum), and “white mode” for simply glowing light.
Cost:Glowing globes, $29-$49; half-globe path lights, $7.99 each
Safety and security lights are ready to shine when the sun goes down.
You should know: A spate of sunless days could leave your motion-detecting security light off-line — a chance you take any time you go solar.
Cost: Security lights, $79.99 to $120; house numbers, $15 and up, depending on design.
You should know: Some solar table lamps do include an electrical plug-in option as well as a solar panel.
Cost: Solar table lamps are $20 and up, depending on size and materials; $600-$1,000 for 9-foot high multi-fixture lamp post.