Christmas without lights is like a day without sunshine. So, light up your holiday season with as many lights as you can.
Of course, Christmas lights are available in many shapes (bulbs, teardrop, globes, icicles, etc.), varying sizes from micro mini to extra large and in eye catching arrays of colors that include reds, oranges, purples, yellows, ambers, greens, blues, whites and clears.
All those are beautiful but there is nothing more classy, more elegant and more easily coordinated than white Christmas lights. And the glow they emit by far surpasses that of any other color lights in warmth, softness and illuminating brightness.
Mini Christmas Lights
Key Product Features:
• 100 mini lights in this string which total 46 feet
• 5 ½ inches between each light
• 36 watts, 120 volts. 2.5 volt bulbs
• White power cord included
• If one light goes off in this commercial grade lighting, the others remain lit
• To make them replaceable, interchangeable and to keep them from falling out, each light is designed with a lamp lock feature.
• Each light is estimated to give you 5,000 hours of light life.
• You will be able to connect multiple sets to one another.
• They are UL listed for indoor as well as outdoor use
White LED Lamps
Key Product Features:
• 20 each warm white LED lamps which total 7 feet
• 4 inch space between each lamp
• White power cord included
• Energy efficient and operated by 3 AA batteries
• Cool to the touch even after long hours of lighting
• UL listed for indoor use only
White Starlight Spheres
Key Product Features:
• Comes with a fuse plug and an extra fuse
• Green lead cord is included and mounting strings
• They are UL approved for use indoors as well as outdoors
Lighting up festivities and celebration of all kinds has been traditionally practiced in just about every culture around the world and the Christian cultures are no different when it comes to celebrating Christmas.
In early modern period, it was Germany who took the lead in lighting up their Christmas trees. Before the advent of electricity, the lighting was taken care of with candles and lanterns and it continued on through the time when electricity and electrical power became more affordable for the masses.
In 1882, Edward H. Johnson, V.P. of Edison Electric Light Co., is credited with being the first to electrically illuminate a Christmas tree. In 1895, President Grover Cleveland lit the first electrically illuminate Christmas tree in the White House.



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