Shop Products
Houzz Logo Print
coolshare

Experiment: how lighting effect black boos

coolshare
18 years ago

Wrapped my Gaint-black ...

{{gwi:415692}}

3 weeks later:

{{gwi:415693}}

So you can "color" your nigra or gb to make it evenly darker

by covering it... :)

Comments (19)

  • georgenvn
    18 years ago

    They will black after 9 months

    >

  • coolshare
    Original Author
    18 years ago

    Not always: many culms of my GB are never turn into black
    (somehow they either stay green or look like Bory) -
    it may be useful in that case :)

  • kudzu9
    18 years ago

    I use black spray paint if they don't change color, preferably a low lustre or semi-gloss...

  • hello_c_j_here
    18 years ago

    Hey Kudzu... thats cheating man!!!
    CJ

  • hollenback
    18 years ago

    Kudzu
    Is your Spotted Vivax caused by the overspray?

    Bill

  • kudzu9
    18 years ago

    Yeah, but it fooled you didn't it! I think I'm going to start a bamboo refinishing service. High gloss black, candy apple red, turquoise, a little pinstriping, you name it. I just offered to do some flames for WildBill's timber bamboo. If the business takes off, I may offer franchises under the Ty Ty brand.

  • tcstoehr
    18 years ago

    Well... it fooled me for a moment until it seemed like the lighting was very similar between the two pictures. Then I noticed that shoot on the left hadn't changed in "three weeks". Good fun though.

  • bamboobob
    18 years ago

    I don't mess with the bamboo but I do spray paint my globemaster lillies after their blooms brown out. Since the bloom is very woody, it takes paint great. I use red. People often ask for some of those flowers that change colors mid-season.

  • coolshare
    Original Author
    18 years ago

    tcstoehr was right: I cheated in the first picture since
    I didn't take a picture when I wrapped the culm (I thought
    it looked "similar" since the unwrapped part didn't change much) but the
    result was true: try it yourself :)

  • coolshare
    Original Author
    18 years ago

    Or the labels for those two pictures should be corrected as

    "I wrapped a GB culm: before removing the wrapper"...

    "and after removing the wrapper 3 weeks later"

  • foxd
    18 years ago

    coolshare: Interesting discovery! I had been puzzling over why my black bamboo had darkened so quickly last year and why this year it has been taking a long time. The fact that I'd cut back some tree branches, so it could get more light, apparently was the cause. I think I'll try the experiment too!

  • MacDaddy
    18 years ago

    Next you guys are going to be putting suntan lotion on your plants to spell your names out and make pictures.

  • foxd
    18 years ago

    I tried the experiment and there was no change in color on the section of the culm covered relative to the rest of the culm. I could post before/during/after pictures if anyone's interested, but all they show is a lack of color change.

  • User
    18 years ago

    I wonder if it was the aluminum foil reacting with the culm instead of lack of light. foxd, when you covered yours, did you use foil or something else?

  • foxd
    18 years ago

    Duct tape with the sticky side out to make removal easier.

  • Bellingham
    18 years ago

    Ok, I'm confused. I thought it was exposure to sunlight that caused the darkening. Is coolshare saying the covered section darkened faster?

  • foxd
    18 years ago

    Bellingham: Yes.

    My suspicion is that it may have something to do with temperature, rather than light.

  • coolshare
    Original Author
    18 years ago

    Here is an update

    {{gwi:415694}}

    As you can see, the difference is still big: the non-wrapped
    area is turning black but very very slow.

    MacDaddy's suggestion is actually what I was thinking as
    next step: do some art work with coloring:)

    Another experiment: what about leaves?

    This is one for a leave of Bambusa affinis Flavidorivens
    after covered half:

    {{gwi:415695}}

  • coolshare
    Original Author
    18 years ago

    BTW, the "update" is based on keeping the wrapped cover
    at the same position so far.

    I will now move the cover to a different position to see
    if is is matter with timing. I think the early you cover
    (right after starting breaching) the better the effect.
    Maybe there is why foxd didn't get the same effect:)