When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: yankee candle chimney lights indoor battery operated

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Yankee Candle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yankee_Candle

    Yankee Candle flagship store in Deerfield, MA. Yankee Candle's flagship store, which opened in 1982, is located in South Deerfield, Massachusetts.It features all available Yankee Candles as well as kitchen and home accessories, New England crafts, gifts and collectibles, a toy shop, picnic grounds and a "Bavarian Christmas Village" filled with decorated Christmas trees and a toy train that ...

  3. Flameless candle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flameless_candle

    As a decorative element, the design of a flameless candle is relatively versatile. The body or "housing" of the device is commonly cylindrical, containing a battery pack and an often flame-shaped LED lamp atop the candle. Many manufactures use LED lights with a sporadic twinkling or flickering effect to simulate the calming glow of an actual flame.

  4. Lantern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lantern

    A lantern is a source of lighting, often portable. It typically features a protective enclosure for the light source – historically usually a candle, a wick in oil, or a thermoluminescent mesh, and often a battery-powered light in modern times – to make it easier to carry and hang up, and make it more reliable outdoors or in drafty interiors.

  5. Kerosene lamp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerosene_lamp

    Flat-wick lamps have the lowest light output, center-draft round-wick lamps have three to four times the output of flat-wick lamps, and pressurized lamps have higher output yet; the range is from 8 to 100 lumens. A kerosene lamp producing 37 lumens for 4 hours per day for a month (120 hours) consumes about 3 litres (6.3 US pt; 5.3 imp pt) of ...

  6. Safety lamp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Safety_lamp

    The light given out by these lamps was poor (particularly Davy's, obscured by the gauze); early lamps gave less light than candles. [23] This was not resolved until the introduction of electric lighting around 1900, and the introduction of battery-powered helmet lamps in 1930.

  7. Stack effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stack_effect

    The stack effect or chimney effect is the movement of air into and out of buildings through unsealed openings, chimneys, flue-gas stacks, or other purposefully designed openings or containers, resulting from air buoyancy. Buoyancy occurs due to a difference in indoor-to-outdoor air density resulting from temperature and moisture differences ...