h a l f b a k e r yA few slices short of a loaf.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
Books should be printed with luminous ink
so that you can read them in the dark.
Phosphorescent pyjamas
http://www.halfbake...horescent_20pyjamas [hippo, Sep 23 2002, last modified Oct 17 2004]
Stuff about ink
http://glossary.ipp...owledge/article/236 Some technical info. [DrBob, Oct 05 2004, last modified Nov 01 2009]
[link]
|
|
I faced with this problem on this years oligatory camping trip with the venomous male youth subset of the famille Ivan. I have a lantern, but it is of the high pressure petrol vapour type and has two drawbacks. It is quite excessively bright and has caused shipping to run aground when camping on the coast, secondly it is absolutely terrifying to be within 10 yards of. My solution was to postulate the luminous tent but I concede yours is a more elegant solution. |
|
|
I know where I could use it, in the car when I'm a passenger travelling at night - where turning on the interior light would distract the driver. I usually end up contorting myself up against the window to trying to see in the moonlight. |
|
|
A battery operated fluro light, with a blacklight tube, might be useful for illuminating books without disturbing sleepers. Because, modern paper is full of 'brightners', chemicals that fluoresce under UV. |
|
|
Humm, feel like a little light reading this evening. |
|
|
I would prefer that the pages be luminous and the ink remain black. For one thing the book would still be readable by day, possibly not the case with luminous ink (which would probably have to be whiteish on dark paper stock to work well, no?) |
|
|
bris, yes the pages would have to be darker in order to make the luminous writing more legible during daylight. After you raised it, I thought that this might be a problem until yesterday, when I was talking to a friend who is involved in adult education. He happened to mention that a high percentage of those who suffer from dyslexia only do so because we use black ink on a white background. Apparently this causes a visual problem and the words become blurred or move around on the page (I'm sure someone will correct me if I've misunderstood) so, I guess it's somewhat akin to colour blindness. So, using a dark page with luminous writing might be the way to go for books. Of course, a lot of those who have no trouble with reading at the moment might suddenly become dyslexic when the new system comes in but we can cross that bridge when we come to it. Turn and turn about I say. |
|
|
A draw back: You would need to charge the book by holding it open near a light source for long enough to allow the phosphors (or whatever) gather enough energy to luminesce for a significant amount of time. So you'd only be able to read the two pages that were open (or perhaps a few more that the light has penetrated to). And if you could charge more, you'd probably have to read quick.
There is a solution: use radium or some similar substance. But there might be a drawback with this too... |
|
|
Or you could just wear Phosphorescent Pyjamas (see
link). Then all your existing books become readable in the
dark. |
|
|
So, namaste, I'd have to come up with some sort of device that opens the book and turns all the pages during the day then? Book accessories, eh? I feel a commercial gold mine coming on!
hippo, what if I don't wear jim-jams? What with your pyjamas and Ivan's tent this is all beginning to sound like an episode (well all of the episodes I suppose) from Scooby Doo. "..and I would have finished my book too if it wasn't for those pesky kids!"
[Notes a fishbone appearing whilst writing anno]
Philistine! |
|
|
veeeeeeery good idea...being the bookworm that I am...but is that possible? they could print with regular ink then place glow-in-the-dark ink on top...
if there is such a thing as glow-in-the-dark ink ^-^ |
|
|
Rats. I was going to post the following in its own right, but after seeing this, I'm putting it here instead. |
|
|
Mix ink with glow in the dark stuff for lights-out reading. |
|
|
Bio- and chemiluminescent materials degrade too quickly, so Im thinking Radium, like they used to use for painting clock hands to bee seen in the dark, until they noticed that the workers who painted the radium onto the clock hands were getting sick. Radiums probably expensive, so texts would likely have to be printed on a to order basis. Such items would be marketed as luxury goods and priced accordingly. |
|
|
A lead smock with protective gloves and headwear should be worn when handling the printed matter. |
|
|
Glow in the dark paints and inks currently exist, but applications appear to be restricted to brush or silkscreen painting. |
|
|
I think you could do something very snifty with this: |
|
|
Use black ink on a white background for daytime, but lace the ink with phosphresent dyes that are clear when not glowing. |
|
|
Then, you could do one of 2 things: Either a blacklight LED booklight to illumnate perminantly, or a blacklight flashlight to trigger the glowing of the text.. would only take about 5sec per 2 pages with enough intensity. |
|
|
Save the trees. Get an eBook! |
|
|
(Seriously, I do almost all my reading on my Palm PDA and no longer have a bedside lamp. When I was reading a dead-tree book recently, I turned off the main light, got into bed and felt foolish when I reached for the book!) |
|
|
Palm-reading... not convinced. I read a lot, both dead-tree and PDA, and I find the screen size on the PDA does tend to spoil the narrative flow... it's just too small, it's difficult to refer to stuff, and turning pages so often just ruins my rhythm. So I'm told, anyway. |
|
|
If they can make glow in the dark tile grout they should be able to make glow in the dark text. Perhaps you have a page comb that slightly separates the pages & you leave the book in the window sill during the day. (I really want glow in the dark tile grout)
If only the book also had an alarm clock. |
|
|
This would be cool for horror novels but you'd have to read it in about 5 minutes though before the luminous ink needed to be recharged. |
|
|
However I don't see any problem with highly radioactive radium ink printing provided the reader was in otherwise good health, read very quickly and had no intentions of using their reproductive organs any time in the future. |
|
|
Brilliant idea. Pity about the time for charging and reading. Apparently you can get ultra-violet chargers for glow-in-the-dark putty, and they give quite a long time of glowingness - maybe this could be adapted? |
|
|
Ideal for reading scary stories in the dark, toooooo |
|
| |