Fitting compact fluorescents in antique lighting

You might think twice before screwing a compact fluorescent light bulb into that lovely antique lamp in dear old Aunt Emily’s front parlor. 

And who could blame you? While CFLs have come a faraway way in the past decade, they still don’t match the warm glow we’ve come to expect from the classic incandescent.

Why desecrate a beautiful light fixture by using anything but the best?

Melding style with energy-saving substance, Vintage Hardware and Lighting claims it’s found a solution.

The company is offering antique reproduction lamps equipped with
special electronic ballasts designed specifically for electronic
compact fluorescents. Unlike traditional CFLs, these bulbs—which have
four prongs on the bottom, instead of an Edison

base—are more
efficient, last 12,000 hours, and, according to Vintage Hardware, give
off wayyy better light quality, ranging from warm white, to rosy, to a neutral white model with a “daylight appearance.”

The ballasts include an electronic chip that give the bulbs more of
an "instant on" effect than other CFLs, which take their own sweet instance
reaching full capacity (truth is, I kind of like that about CFLs—how
turning one on is like watching an early dawn sunrise).

I’m not certain whether these bulbs and ballasts will start a lighting revolution, but the lamps certain are pretty.

More pretty lamps:

Our gallery of schoolhouse lights

Orginal post by Keith Pandolfi

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