A handy motion-activated LED light that illuminates the interior of mailbox at night so you can see what's in there.
This terrifying inflatable grim reaper skeleton sits in the passenger seat with you to scare anyone who dares to look in the window.
It illuminates the rim, backboard, and net of your basketball hoop in the dark and has shot reactive sensors that flash red when you miss a shot and green when you make a basket.
This cool new Solar Light LED Planter absorbs the power of the sun during the day and then illuminates the plants and flowers inside and all the ground around it after dark using 12 built-in LED lights (6 around ... Continue
A sleek, modern take on an old-fashioned heirloom oil lamp that illuminates the darkness with a flameless glowing LED wick.
This unique lamp has a convenient telescoping column that adjusts in height from 31.5 - 57.5 inches tall, allowing it to transform from a table lamp all the way up to a floor lamp depending on intended use.
These futuristic coat hangers illuminate closets, bedrooms, bathrooms, or anywhere you hang them with a soft white light from two frosted sections at the touch of a button, but they aren't too bright to awaken others.
The typical big sculptural Himalayan salt lamp has now been shrunk down into a standard light bulb that helps to purify the air from contaminants, while also releasing negative ions that counter the effects from electromagnetic radiation (EMR) emitted ... Continue
A highly detailed 1:20 million scale 3D replica of the Moon with precision craters, elevation, and ridges recreated from NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter topographic data and it also accurately recreates the lunar phases with an LED ring of illumination ... Continue
A little glow-in-the-dark medallion that can be attached to keys, ceiling fan or closet light pull chains, zippers, backpacks, pet collars, or anywhere you need a little helpful visual illumination.
It may look like an ordinary basketball net during the day, but when the lights go down it brightly illuminates a fluorescent green for up to 8 hours! Why didn't anyone think of this before?