![]() This is quite time consuming, especially while your mounting it to the wall at the same time. The cords need to be routed perfectly so they fit snug and so there’s no extra wire available by the time it gets connected to the next Tile. I decided not to do that and instead have all of the Tiles touching each other, but it immediately became apparent that the install would take a while. The cool advantage about using this method is that the Tiles doesn’t need to be touching each other, which opens up some pretty neat design possibilities. The LIFX Tiles use cords and ports to connect to each other. With the Light Panels, you are given little connectors that let you snap two panels together. Sadly, that’s the only easy part of the installation, at least compared to the Nanoleaf Light Panels. I thought this was very clever and that it would make it fairly easy to take down if you wanted to move it in the future. ![]() ![]() To set up the Tiles, you first apply some Velcro tabs to both the wall and Tiles. Included are 5 light Tiles, 4 short cords which lets the Tiles connect to each other, and one long cord which lets it connect to the power supply. Let’s start by taking a look of what’s inside the box. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |