Archive for October 6th, 2009

Heated LED Bathroom Mirrors: The Ultimate Bathroom Accessory?

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

Introduction

Central to the mythology of mirrors is Narcissus a Boeotian hero, who disliked those who loved him for his own natural beauty. He famously gazed into a pool of water and was so fascinated with the reflection, that he was unable to bring himself to leave the image. Not realising that the image he could see was of his own natural beauty, he couldn’t bring himself to leave the image, and he perished.

The concept of how the mirror works is quite simple. It stems simply from the reflective surface of still water and therefore nature plays its part. When you look down into a puddle or a dark pool of water, the smooth water reflects the light straight back into your eyes. Mirrors work in exactly the same way, in that a mirror is made up of a coated glass surface which when a polished metal surface or metal film is applied behind the glass, light cannot shine through and so reflects the image back. Young children particularly, are always fascinated when they look into a mirror for the first time and see their own reflection staring back at them. Anyone who has young children will remember the vision of their young child daughter kissing their image on a mirror. My eight year old daughter loves sitting in front of her mirror applying her make up nearly as much as my fifteen year old daughter!

Where would we be today without mirrors? Mirrors are generally used for personal grooming or interior decoration and have evolved from a luxury item into a necessity. There is an enormous variety of mirror shapes and sizes and over the years, mirrors have gradually developed to meet many different requirements. Today there is a large selection of mirrors , ranging from small mirrors to large mirrors, framed, unframed and includes bathroom mirrors, decorative mirrors, illuminated mirrors, LED mirrors, shaving mirrors, compact mirrors and demister mirrors.
Away from personal use, mirrors are also used in industryas part of scientific apparatus such as cameras, lasers, telescopes and periscopes, to reflect light and used as tools in dentistry and medical care.

History of Mirrors

The history of mirrors as far as we can see dates back over 8,000 years. The earliest known mirrors were made from pieces of polished stone such as obsidian, a naturally occurring glass from cooled volcanic lava flows. In Anatolia in Turkey, examples of obsidian mirrors dated at around 6000 BC have been found. In south and central America, polished stone mirrors from around 2000 BC on wards have also been found. From around 3000 BC mirrors of polished copper are known to have been crafted in ancient Egypt. In China bronze mirrors were manufactured from around 2000 BC.

The first metal coated glass mirrors are thought to have been made in the first century AD, in Sidon, known today as Lebanon. The Roman author Pliny makes reference to glass mirrors backed with gold leaf in his Naturalis Historia, one of the largest reference books to have survived from the Roman Empire, which focused on natural and man-made objects and was written in around 77 AD.

In the 10th Century Arabian Physicists, considered different types of mirrors, reflecting mirrors and parabolic mirrors and another discussed concave and convex mirrors in both cylindrical and spherical geometries. In undertaking various experiments with mirrors, finding the point on a convex mirror at which a ray of light coming from one point is reflected to another point was solved.

During the period of the 14th to 17th Centuries, across Europe a method of coating glass with a tin-mercury amalgam was perfected by manufacturers. Venice was recognised for its glass making expertise and soon became a centre of mirror production using this new technique. Glass mirrors from this period were extremely expensive luxuries. Manufacturers also evolved in London, France and Germany.

The particular process of silvering to produce the first silvered-glass mirror is credited to German chemist Justus von Liebig in 1835. He developed a process to apply a thin layer of metallic silver onto glass through the chemical reduction of silver nitrate. The process was adapted for mass production and led to the greater availability of affordable mirrors.

The evolution of the mirror over the years is quite interesting, if like me you love mirrors! It has developed from a luxury item to an item which is now taken for granted in daily use. Today, walk into any shop to look at mirrors and the selection is vast, with many technology features now finding there way into mirrors, to give added simplicity, luxury and decoration.

An enormous range of unique eye catching designs for backlit mirrors are now available such as the inclusion of LED lights and demisters.

How are Mirrors Made?

The manufacture of mirrors includes the application to a suitable material of a reflective coating. Glass is the most common material, due to its ability to take a smooth finish and its rigidity. Glass is also more scratch resistant than many other materials previously used for making mirrors.

Early mirrors were made of solid metal, bronze or silver and they were far too expensive for many. Metal is also prone to corrosion and because of polished metal’s low emissivity, antique mirrors were less suitable for indoor use. With indoor lighting at the time supplied by candles or lanterns, the metal mirrors reflected a much darker picture.

In modern times ‘float glass’ is used in the manufacture of mirrors, which is a flat ribbon of glass which is run out of a furnace and along the surface of a bath of molten tin. The temperature of both the glass and molten tin is controlled to enable both surfaces to be made perfectly flat. There are now three common types of mirrors: plain - which has a flat surface, and the two spherical types of mirrors: the convex and the concave. The concave and convex mirrors can be used in an entertaining way, when used at fairgrounds or amusement parks to distort peoples figures reflected in them through bloating, stretching and shrinking, the person or object in front of them. I challenge even the most dour faced individual to stand in front of a mirror in a hall of mirrors without laughing at their reflection!

In some applications, a mirror isn’t a mirror at all. For example, when used in public conveniences, particularly in public or factory toilets, where for reasons of cost and the need for greater durability, a single polished metal sheet is often installed as a form of mirror.

Different Types of Mirror

Throughout the ages, mirrors have been employed as symbols of truth, deception and vanity. Mention a mirror and you instantly know that if you look into one, you will see your own reflection staring back at you. The image you see will resemble your own appearance. In optical principles, the reflections in mirrors do not totally match the objects in front of them. When looking into the mirror, trace the contour of the reflection of your head in a mirror. The reflection may correspond in proportion, but will generally be half in actual size.
With such a variety and huge range of mirrors now available, much has been made of the amount of money spent in purchasing mirrors especially by women, although in this day and age with an increase in men purchasing cosmetics, some men will also be vain enough to carry a mirror.

The vain Queen in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs famously asked her special mirror, “Mirror, Mirror on the Wall, who’s the fairest of them all?” Mirrors are synonymous with truth.
Mirrors are frequently used in interior decoration to create an illusion of space, and to decorate and amplify the apparent size of a room. They will be used around the home, the office, a pub, club or restaurant to good effect. They work particularly well in night clubs, reflecting the many images of light in the club or room to create a feeling of a much bigger space.

Infinity Mirrors provide an effect of never reaching an end, known as ‘symmetry breaking’ and are particularly effective when used in a dark environment. I remember experiencing this phenomenon for the first time as a child in a large department store lift, where mirrors where on all sides of the elevator car. For those who are not good in lifts I should think this effect probably does nothing to calm them, perhaps that’s why you don’t see lifts like this anymore Or is it just because I’m getting old and that was a particular style popular in the 70’s!

My next favourite kind of mirror after the infinity mirror is the heated mirror, these mirrors have a heating element or what is called a demister pad mounted on the back. The reason a mirror steams up when you have a shower is because the surface temperature of the mirror is colder than the air temperature and causes the water vapour in the air to condense on the mirror. Some bright spark realised long ago that it if you heated the mirror this would avoid it steaming up, brilliant!

For many years heated mirrors have only featured in very expensive bathrooms usually costing thousands, and quality hotels have used heated mirrors as a neat differentiator from the increasingly popular budget hotels and motels. Of course it is not until you step out of the hotel shower and see yourself in the mirror that you realise it is there! Whilst at the back of your mind you realise this is one of the reasons why this room is more expensive than the other hotel across the street.

Last week I heard the BBC Radio 2 DJ Ken Bruce state that the best shave you ever had will have been in a hotel, to which he attributed the benefit of the heated bathroom mirror as the main reason. I have to agree, and every time I stay in (nice) hotel I always have a really good look at the bathroom with a view to reproducing the best of its features in my own home.

If you already have a nice bathroom mirror but it is not heated, and wish you had bought one of the demister mirrors instead it’s possible to order just the demister pad component and upgrade your current mirror. Upgrading your mirror, who would have thought that was something we would be writing about 20 years ago!

In 1980, ska group The Beat had a UK top ten hit with ‘Mirror in the Bathroom’ and the bathroom is probably the location where we are most intimate with our mirrors. Many will say that it is not wise to look at yourself in the mirror first thing in the morning, but the bathroom is often the first port of call in the morning. Many bathrooms feature a main bathroom mirror positioned on a wall and a bathroom cabinet with mirror doors. Other than the “oh my god” do I really look like that expression, the uses of a mirror or mirrors in a bathroom will generally be to aid the application of make up, hair styling or shaving. One of the major problems with bathroom mirrors is that after showering or bathing, the mirror is misted over.

A recent addition in the manufacture of heated mirrors is the inclusion of a demister pad which clears the mirror for use in just seconds. Just think never having to again wait for the steam of the bathroom to disappear from the mirror, or having to open the window, before using the mirror to shave or apply make up. The bathroom mirror demister or steam free bathroom mirror is a great invention. Some manufacturers refer to these products as fog free bathroom mirrors and there is now a huge range available, again some with back lights, LED lighting and built in shaver points.

Demister mirrors and steam free bathroom mirrors are not the only recent developments on mirrors. As suggested above another reasonably new product is the backlit bathroom mirror. Illuminated mirrors maintain the features of a simple mirror, but will enhance any environment in which they are used with the addition of lighting. As with all mirrors, the range of illuminated mirrors is extensive, with a variety of sizes and shapes available. An Illuminated mirror with shaving point can also be purchased.

Mirrors with illuminated LED lights will enhance any bathroom or environment in which they are installed. Being of low energy consumption LED, or light emitting diode, are more environmentally friendly than traditional bulbs. They are designed to withstand the dampness of the bathroom environment. So water vapour mist will not cause a problem. As a real luxury mirror, illuminated bathroom mirrors and bathroom mirrors with LED lighting can also include a demister pad, to demist the mirror in just a few seconds and an on/off sensor to activate the lights as soon as motion is detected in front of the mirror. Now bathroom cabinets are also available with inbuilt back lights, and LED lighting for that special something different in your bathroom.
As a bathroom accessory the mirror should come high on the list, in fact can you really have a finished bathroom without a mirror? The enormous selection of styles, types, shapes and sizes means that there must be a mirror to match anyone’s budget. Although some of the latest technological versions such as illuminated, backlit and LED mirrors could be considered to be luxury items, some are not as expensive as you may have thought.

Not sure what to buy for a wedding present? You can bet a heated bathroom mirror won’t be on their wedding present list and these are always very well received gifts, especially if the newlyweds like showers together!

Mirrors, Superstition and Auspicious Energy Flow

I have always loved mirrors, probably why I have ended up in the mirrors business! When I was at school I did a project on them, this was before the internet was invented mind so I trawled through piles and piles of reference books in both the school and local library for months. These days of course it would only take half an hour on Google, kids these days don’t know how easy they’ve got it!

Once you get immersed in mirrors as I did all those years ago, or ‘mirros’ as I frequently misspelled it, and start researching them, you find that they play a major part in all aspects of life. Mirrors also feature in superstitions. One of the most commonly known superstitions is that someone who breaks a mirror will receive seven years bad luck. A popular belief for this superstition is that mirrors are a reflection of the soul and if a mirror is broken, then part of the soul is broken. Added to this, some believe that the soul regenerates every seven years in an unbroken condition, hence the seven years of bad luck. I bet you’ve always wondered what that was about so I’m glad to share that with you!

It is also said that the mirror does not lie. A mirror can show only the truth. It is a very bad omen indeed to see something in a mirror which should not be there, a technique regularly used in scary movies! Some cultures also have a custom that a newborn child should not look into a mirror until its first birthday because its soul is still developing.

In the southern United States, it used to be customary to cover the mirrors in a house where the wake of a deceased person was being held. If a mirror was left uncovered or exposed, people believed that the deceased person’s soul would become trapped in any uncovered mirror. It was also thought that mirrors unexpectedly falling or mysteriously cracking were believed to be haunted.

In the ancient art of Feng Shui mirror placement is considered very important. There is a lot of information available about this, and it is a subject that can’t be covered in a mere paragraph or two here. But Chi energy flow can be influenced by mirrors so where the energy needs to be reflected, mirrors can be used for this to great effect. Personally I don’t really follow these rules, although my mum has mirrors strategically placed all over her house to redirect negative energy! One of the principles I do follow though is to make sure I don’t have any mirrors pointing at my bed, or the kids beds, as this is said to reflect your dreams back onto you whilst you are sleeping!

Conclusion

A mirror is defined as a coated glass surface for reflecting images. There is a huge range of mirrors for domestic use, and available in many shapes and sizes. The most commonly seen uses of mirrors are for personal grooming and interior decoration. As a race we are thoroughly addicted to mirrors. Who can honestly say that they can walk past a mirror without taking a look at themselves?

Over time, mirrors have evolved from a luxury item to an item of necessity and many particularly women will always carry a mirror in their hand bags. However, today with technological advancements, some mirrors will be seen as a luxury, particularly those which include illumination, LED or demisting devices. As individuals we spend many hours of our life in a bathroom, so why not treat yourself to one of life’s little luxuries and indulge in a stylish bathroom mirror? After all, let’s be honest, who can really live without looking in a mirror at least once a day?

The Advantages of Email Marketing for Businesses

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

Email marketing is a very cost-effective method for a business to promote its products or services to a broad audience. If you can plan a good email campaign with a quality business email list then you can see great results from it.

An important advantage of business email marketing is that it enables you to reach a large audience with minimal effort. It is relatively cheap to launch a business to business email marketing campaign when compared to other marketing methods. Often, you will already have your own email list that you have compiled from your own client list. If you don’t have your own list, then there are reputable business email list brokers that can sell you a list of business email addresses. The quality of these business email lists can vary widely, so be sure to establish where the list originated and how recently it has been validated.

The cost to transmit emails is also very low compared to traditional mailshots. Usually, each email will cost less than a penny per email if sent in high enough volumes. Therefore, the cost is very low to broadcast an email marketing campaign.

Email campaigns can also be easily tracked. Lots of very useful data can be tracked by the email marketer, such as open rates, click rates and bounce rates. This information can be utilised to refine your campaigns. As an example, you can vary the subject line of the email and track which version gets the highest open rates.

If you can afford it, then it is a very good idea to pay for the services of a professional business email marketing company to design and broadcast your email campaigns. If you are trying to optimise your response rates from your email campaign and increase your sales, then a specialist business to business (B2B) email marketing company should help you to increase your return on investment and generate better results.

Unbiased Garmin nuvi 255W Auto GPS Review

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

Provided that you would not require bluetooth or free lifetime traffic alerts, the Garmin Nuvi 255W is a good alternative to the top-rated Garmin Nuvi 265T or wide display Garmin Nuvi 265WT. The Garmin 255W has a widescreen, and its text-to-speech reads street and points of interest names aloud. The price difference between the Garmin 255W and Garmin 265T is now minor, but the Garmin 255W’s easier-to-see widescreen makes it the better purchase, especially for people who live outside the 50 metropolitan areas sheltered by Garmin’s complimentary traffic information. Although traffic alerts are accessible on the Garmin 255W, they call for users to shell out further cash for using it.

With a clear display that an ease to read in any level of brightness, the Garmin 255W is a small and portable gadget that allows usage when on foot. The mount works magnificently on the windshield and it is also easy to chuck them aside upon parking. The Garmin 255W is able to accurately tell you the speed limits of the roads and the points of interest will serve you well in finding, for example, eateries and gas stations.. With the letter “W” at the rear of its name, the Garmin 255W has a wider screen which translates to a bigger keyboard, to make destinations inputting an even easier task, and also an increase in the map area, enabling you to see further map as you drive. Also, the Garmin 255W features better touch screen for entering destinations and an incontestably fast speed of acquiring satellites.

Rounding up the Garmin 255W, it boasts a big 4.3-inch touch display with an simple-to-understand set up. The start-up, keying of destination, and trip routing and rerouting all clocked faster timings than its competitors and the “Where am I?” feature is very helpful in case of emergencies. As entry-level car GPS go, one of the best possible choices is absolutely the Garmin 255W for anybody who desires speedy performance without breaking the bank. Picking your portable navigator should not be treated as a trivia matter and you should read up on more GPS reviews before getting you road companion. As an inexpensive as well as a value for money car GPS, the Garmin Nuvi 255W would definitely be on your list of road warrior companion options.

It Only Takes Minutes To Find Out How Much Money You Can Save On Insurance

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

Insurance is one of those those expenses that you just can’t avoid. On the bright side of things you can pay less for insurance. The best way to lower your insurance costs is to get yourself an array of insurance quotes so you know the insurance prices available and you can see which offer will save a greater amount of cash and still offer you the coverage you desire. Using the links above you can get quotes for renters, life, home, auto, health insurance coverage.

If you are just seeking a cheap auto insurance quote you can just use this link. With the quotes you get on car insurance you may find that you can save more than just a little money. Maybe your true intent is not solely to reduce your insurance bill but to buy better quality auto coverage. Taking into consideration the likelihood of better rates with the possibility of get improved quality insurance coverage, getting several quotes is a win-win proposition.

There are also more areas of insurance that one may save much money if you get a variety of insurance quotes. Life insurance is one of those types. You will want to coordinate your life coverage with the budget of your family. It might be painful to consider what things will be like when you die, but it is important. The current income needs of your loved ones will not change after your death but your income will not longer be coming in. You will want to locate the lowest charges for the value of life coverage you will require based on your estimates. Life insurance policies can be hard to understand, so you could want to get some legal assistance to make your decisions on the best insurance for your situation.

Medical coverage is a basic need for everybody. You never know when you will fall ill and amass huge hospital fees. If you don’t have any health insurance coverage one hospital stay can be disastrous to your finances. In spite of that, there is no requirement to pay top dollar for your health care insurance coverage. If you are not covered or are not covered sufficiently through your job you will need to acquire a few of health insurance estimates. You will want to consider the deductible and other out of pocket expenses as you are choosing.

Your home is certainly the highest cost thing you will ever purchase and you need quality howowners insurance coverage to protect that investment. You will want to carefully consider how much your home is worth. Also, you don’t want to forget the contents of your home, particularly if you have expensive furniture or collections. Once you have an idea of how much insurance coverage you will need you will want to get quotes for your home owners insurance also. You will want to consider the price as well as what types of things are covered.

If you spend a modicum of time and obtain multiple quotes on several types of insurance coverage you can expect significant savings and have the satisfaction that you are totally covered at a nice price.

ww1.easy-thinking.ca