What are the lighting conditions generally like at an admissions office in an architecture grad school? Yellow, bright yellow, white+yellow, bright white, etc.? Please state which school you go/went to.
Milwaukee08, how dominant is the window lighting compared to the fluorescent lighting? How bright is the fluorescent lighting? Which angle do the windows face (something more than "south", please)? Where is the main table located and how does this location affect its lighting? Which school is this? I'm looking for specific descriptions for a research topic I'm doing.
LIGHTING Conditions at SCHOOLS
What are the lighting conditions generally like at an admissions office in an architecture grad school? Yellow, bright yellow, white+yellow, bright white, etc.? Please state which school you go/went to.
Also, what is the main lighting source - interior lights or exterior light seeping in through windows?
Sorry for the accidental double topic-post; feel free to delete one or the other.
This must be a hankd thread.
As far as I'm concerned your already a meme.
... You're ... That is
we have strobe lights going at all times
It might behoove you to use neon colors in your portfolio, since our school is lit entirely by blacklight.
In reality, most of our school has white fluorescent lighting, and the conference room where the faculty review portfolios has a south facing window.
In this economy the only light we can afford is that from burning the final projects of undergrads. We ran out of candles a while ago.
Milwaukee08, how dominant is the window lighting compared to the fluorescent lighting? How bright is the fluorescent lighting? Which angle do the windows face (something more than "south", please)? Where is the main table located and how does this location affect its lighting? Which school is this? I'm looking for specific descriptions for a research topic I'm doing.
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