This adorable Lighted Rudolph with Banner Outdoor Decoration
is 48 inches long. The Lighted Rudolph with Banner Outdoor Decoration has 150 lights to illuminate it. Made of metal, paper and glass. This is a wonderful addition to your yard art. Rudolph is a light brown color with a red banner wrapped around his neck. The banner says Merry Christmas in white. He has his traditional red nose and bells around his chest.
Select this link to view our Large Holiday Decorations.
Holographic Facts:
The difference between holography and photography is best understood by considering what a Black & White (B&W) photograph actually is: it is a point-to-point recording of the intensity of light rays that make up an image. Each point on the photograph records just one thing, the intensity (i.e. the square of the amplitude of the electric field) of the light wave that illuminates that particular point. In the case of a color photograph, slightly more information is recorded (in effect the image is recorded three times viewed through three different color filters), which allows a limited reconstruction of the wavelength of the light, and thus its color.
However, the light which makes up a real scene is not only specified by its amplitude and wavelength, but also by its phase. In a photograph, the phase of the light from the original scene is lost. In a hologram, both the amplitude and the phase of the light (usually at one particular wavelength) are recorded. When reconstructed, the resulting light field is identical to that which emanated from the original scene, giving a perfect three-dimensional image.
Several types of holograms can be made. The very first holograms were "transmission holograms", which were viewed by shining laser light through them. A later refinement, the "rainbow transmission" hologram allowed viewing by white light and is commonly seen today on credit cards as a security feature and on product packaging. These versions of the rainbow transmission holograms incorporate a reflective foil backing which provides the light from "behind" to reconstruct their imagery. Another kind of common hologram is the true "white-light reflection hologram" which is made in such a way that the image is reconstructed naturally using light on the same side of the hologram as the viewer.



