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The Glow Effect. By: Alicity Quick. Table of Contents. What helps the glow effect? What different types of things do you put on it to make it glow? How does the glow effect pick color over power? The pictures are things that glow. Introduction.
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The Glow Effect By: Alicity Quick
Table of Contents • What helps the glow effect? • What different types of things do you put on it to make it glow? • How does the glow effect pick color over power? • The pictures are things that glow.
Introduction • How do you make regular colors pop with the glow effect? • The glow effect is interesting because of what it is used on and how they make it. • Something's that they use it on are billboards, panels, and in dye. • The picture looks like popping colors.
Paragraph 1 • Because of the glow effect almost everything can glow today. • Fluorescence is apart of the glow effect, it is not visible in daylight. • It reflects colors. • The picture shows how the glow is reflected.
Paragraph 1 • The sun helps the glow effect because it has colors from red to blue. • When you combine the colors it makes a white light. • It hits an object and it reflects. • The picture is red and blue being mixed together.
Paragraph 2 • By soaking billboards in the hot dye causes it to glow in the dark. • With using chemicals you can make the glow in the dark dye. • The picture represents the billboards.
Paragraph 2 • Spray the panels with the glow in the dark chemicals. • Photons cause it to only glow in the dark. • The picture represents the panels.
Paragraph 3 • The glow effect reflects power over color. • The brightness and type of bulb determines the efficiency. • The balloons are the color and the plug is the power.
Paragraph 3 • The charging source is determined by the brightness and spectrum. • The color is boosted by the white light. • The pictures go in order from colors to white light to brightness.
Conclusion • The glow effect is interesting because of what it is used on. • What type of chemicals were used? • Who invented the glow effect? • The picture represents the chemicals
Work Cited • Barton, Chris. The Day-Glo Brothers. Watertown, MA: Chalesbridge, 2009. • “Comparing Colors.” ehow. 2003. May 9 2013 http://www.ehow.com/info_83192sunhtml. • “Make Things Glow.”glowinc.2009. May 9 2013 http://glowinc.com/glow-in-the-dark/lightsource.aspx. • The picture represents the enternet