You can save a lot of money by using solar outdoor lighting rather than traditional incandescent lighting. While often times it doesn’t match the brightness of incandescent lighting, it is far cheaper to install and it’s powered by the sun so it doesn’t raise your electric bill. There is a wide variety of outdoor solar lighting available and often times they come in a variety of names. For example, the very same light might change its name by the way it is used. If you put that same light in your garden, you can now call it the solar garden light. The same light can become a solar yard light if placed in your yard or solar patio lights when placed on your patio, and even a solar path light if it is placed along a walkway.
This is complicated by the fact that the retailers name the lights according to the keywords people look for. This can be somewhat confusing, because your never hundred percent sure what to look for. A drastic example of this is the term “Kichler solar lights”. This is a term that people will search for, however Kichler doesn’t make solar lights. That doesn’t really matter, websites will still optimize for this nonexistent product, because people look for it. Browsers search the pages up and down and can’t figure out why they can’t find what they’re looking for. And the retailer hopes they’ll find something close enough. Since people are looking for them, Kichler should make solar lights.
And yes I digress, getting back to the point the way solar lighting is named is a combination of the ways used, tempered by the names people look for. Solar spotlights or solar floodlight tend to escape this fate, however, they are sometimes classified solar accent lights because they are often used to highlight some features such as a tree or a statue.
If the names are confusing, it seems that a good solution might be to rely on the pictures. Just look at the pictures, and stop when you see the right one. Then use it anyway you want to. In identifying outdoor solar lighting pictures are far more valuable than words.
In closing, I highly recommend using solar lighting whenever possible, because it costs virtually nothing to install because there’s no wiring, and because it doesn’t require power from the grid, so it will not affect your electric bill. There is a wide variety of solar lighting out there, so use the pictures, and read the descriptions in order to get an idea of the quality. Happy surfing!