SKU: 28539004727

Grow Gang Pianta Full Spectrum Plant Light Bulb

Sale price$31.50 Regular price$35.00
Save 10%

Pay in installments of $8.75 with ShopPay, AfterPay and Klarna

Shipping Estimate
USA
  • USA
  • CAN

Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jul 20 - Jul 25

Promo Codes Available:

For Your Every Summer RSVP, with Code: SUMMER15

Description

Grow Gang Pianta Full Spectrum Plant Light BulbThe problem with growing houseplants properly in the UK is straightforward: there isn't enough light. Most British homes don't get the consistent bright indirect light that tropical houseplants properly need particularly through the dark months from November to February, when even south facing windowsills receive only a few weak hours of daylight. The result is the slow decline so familiar to UK houseplant collectors: stretched stems, pale leaves,

The problem with growing houseplants properly in the UK is straightforward: there isn't enough light. Most British homes don't get the consistent bright indirect light that tropical houseplants properly need — particularly through the dark months from November to February, when even south-facing windowsills receive only a few weak hours of daylight. The result is the slow decline so familiar to UK houseplant collectors: stretched stems, pale leaves, halted growth, and the gradual loss of plants that thrived in the brighter months.

The Grow Gang Pianta Full Spectrum Plant Light is properly the right answer. A full-spectrum LED grow bulb that screws into any standard E27 light fitting — the same fitting as your existing table lamps, pendant lights or desk lamps. No special stands, no purple-glowing aesthetic, no specialist lighting setup. Just better light for your plants, in fittings you already own.

Why this bulb is genuinely different

Most grow lights have one obvious problem — they require dedicated lighting setups that look out of place in a normal home. The harsh purple light, the industrial-looking fixtures, the cables and stands; all fine in a dedicated growing room or greenhouse, but properly unsuitable for the living room. The Pianta solves this through three genuine design choices:

  • Standard E27 screw fitting — fits any existing UK lamp, pendant or fixture. No new equipment required
  • Warm white light (3,400K) — the bulb actually looks like a normal warm light bulb, not a purple grow light. Suitable for use in occupied living spaces without aesthetic compromise
  • Full spectrum — properly mimics natural sunlight across the wavelengths plants actually need for photosynthesis, not just the cherry-picked red and blue of cheap grow bulbs

The result is a grow light you can actually use in your home — not a piece of horticultural equipment exiled to a garage or spare room. Plants get proper supplemental light; rooms still look like rooms.

The technical specifications

  • Bulb type: E27 screw fitting (the standard UK fitting)
  • Wattage: 18W (energy-efficient for the light output)
  • Voltage: 110V–230V (works on UK mains)
  • LED technology: Samsung LED (properly reputable brand)
  • Colour temperature: 3,400K (warm white)
  • Beam angle: 60 degrees (focused light for a planted area)
  • Bulb life: 50,000 hours (8+ years of daily use at 16 hours per day)
  • Dimmable: No
  • Spectrum: Full spectrum (mimics natural sunlight)
  • Colour options: White Bulb or Black Bulb (same price)

The 50,000-hour life

That figure deserves a small explanation. 50,000 hours is genuinely substantial:

  • Continuous use: 5.7 years if left on 24 hours a day (which you shouldn't)
  • 16 hours per day: 8.6 years of daily use (typical grow-light pattern)
  • 12 hours per day: 11.4 years of daily use (more conservative)
  • Winter-only supplemental: properly the rest of the bulb's potential life

At £35 spread across nearly a decade of plant lighting, the cost-per-year works out very reasonably for a quality piece of horticultural kit.

What it's for

  • Winter houseplant supplementation — the headline use; gets houseplants through the dark UK winter without stretching, leaf loss, or decline
  • Indoor seed sowing — provides the strong light young seedlings need to grow stocky and strong rather than leggy
  • Year-round low-light room growing — for houseplants in north-facing rooms, basement conversions, or properties with limited natural light
  • Microgreen growing — the right light for the rapid-cycle indoor production of microgreens
  • Indoor herb growing — basil, parsley, coriander, chives growing on the kitchen counter year-round
  • Citrus and fig overwintering — indoor citrus trees and figs benefit from supplemental light through the dormant period
  • Seedling propagation — particularly for the chilli and tomato seedlings that need long indoor growing periods
  • Houseplant rescue — reviving a struggling fiddle leaf fig, monstera, ficus or calathea that's been declining in low light
  • Specialist plant collections — orchids, aroids, carnivorous plants, bromeliads in indoor conditions

Particularly good for

  • Houseplant enthusiasts — the right grow light for serious indoor plant collectors who want light that doesn't compromise their living spaces
  • Aroid collectors — monstera, philodendron, anthurium, alocasia growers managing valuable plant collections
  • North-facing flat dwellers — those whose homes simply don't have enough natural light for plants to thrive
  • Winter chilli growers — chillies need long growing seasons; supplemental light extends the productive period
  • Microgreen growers — for the indoor rapid-cycle production through dark months
  • Seed sowers raising plants indoors — helps prevent leggy seedlings during winter sowing
  • Conservatory and orangery growers — supplemental light extends growing season for tender plants overwintering inside
  • Kitchen herb gardeners — year-round indoor herb production for fresh kitchen use
  • Beginner houseplant gardeners — particularly those who've lost plants to UK low light conditions and want to give next ones a better chance
  • As a gift for a serious houseplant enthusiast — properly considered, technical, and not the typical garden gift

How to use it

  1. Screw into any standard E27 light fitting — existing table lamps, pendant lights, desk lamps, all work
  2. Position the bulb 15–45cm from your plants — closer for seedlings and microgreens; further for established houseplants
  3. Set a daily light schedule — 12–16 hours per day is typical for grow lights. A simple plug-in timer makes this automatic
  4. Watch your plants respond — new growth becomes stockier and stronger; pale plants regain colour; stretched stems develop more compact growth patterns
  5. Adjust as needed — if plants show signs of light burn (yellowing leaves directly under the bulb), move the bulb further away. If growth remains leggy, move closer or extend the daily hours

For most houseplant supplementation, a single bulb in a desk or table lamp positioned 30cm above the plants for 12–14 hours daily produces noticeable results within 2–3 weeks.

The 3,400K warm white — what it means

Most grow lights look obviously horticultural — the purple-pink glow of red-and-blue LED arrays designed for maximum plant efficiency at the cost of aesthetic acceptability. The Pianta uses a 3,400K warm white spectrum that:

  • Looks like a normal warm light bulb — suitable for living rooms, kitchens, conservatories, bedrooms
  • Provides full-spectrum light for actual plant growth
  • Doesn't dominate the aesthetic of a room the way harsh purple grow lights do
  • Lets plants be displayed as plants, not as horticultural equipment

For houseplant collectors who care about how their plants are presented in their home (rather than just maximising growth in a dedicated grow room), this is properly important.

Choosing between the colour options

  • White Bulb — the classic light-bulb look; disappears into white pendant fittings, table lamps, ceiling fixtures
  • Black Bulb — a more design-led aesthetic; works particularly well in industrial-style or contemporary lighting, where the bulb itself becomes a visible feature

Both produce identical light output. The choice is purely aesthetic to suit your fitting and room style.

Where it fits in our range

The grow light extends our indoor growing kit into the lighting category — a properly distinct piece of equipment alongside our other indoor growing essentials:

Together these form a properly considered indoor growing system for the serious UK gardener — whether you're raising winter microgreens, propagating chilli seedlings, overwintering tender plants, or maintaining a collection of houseplants through the dark months.

About Grow Gang

Grow Gang is a UK supplier specialising in indoor plant care equipment. They focus on properly engineered products that work in real domestic settings — not industrial growing equipment adapted for home use, but kit specifically designed for indoor plant collectors and houseplant enthusiasts. We stock their range because their products solve genuine problems for UK indoor growers.

A small thought: the satisfaction of houseplant care is properly bound up with seasonal rhythms — the bright summer growth months, the slow autumn settling-in, the dark winter survival, the spring revival. UK winters are properly punishing for houseplants, particularly for the tropical species we love to grow indoors. A good grow light doesn't eliminate the seasonal rhythm; it just gives plants enough light to keep ticking through the dark months and emerge healthy in spring. The kind of small intervention that quietly saves a careful collection from the worst of the UK winter. Worth keeping a spare bulb, too — a houseplant collection thriving through January is worth a small redundancy in your equipment.

Shipping Notes
  • Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
  • Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
  • Delivery to the USA:
  1. Standard Shipping : 3-10 business days
  • If time is of the essence, please consider selecting expedited delivery for faster service.
Exchange/Return Notes
  • We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
  • To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
  • Please click here for more details>>> Return & Exchange Policy
SKU: 28539004727

Discover Niche Categories That Outsell

Top-Converting Item to Boost Your Average Order

4.6 ★★★★★
Based on 22 reviews
Sort
Highest Rating
Newest First
Oldest First
Product Reviews
V
Verified Purchase
Victor Vögel
Cuba, US
★★★★★ 5
Mesmerizing; shows the butterfly effect in action
Format: Paperback
Charles Mann’s “1493” is about globalization and the Homogenocene epoch. Unlike the plenitude of other recent books about globalization, however, “1493” is about biological globalization rather than economic globalization. The book traces the results of the Columbian Exchange, with chapters devoted to tobacco, the earthworm, malaria, silver, potatoes and sweet potatoes, guano and rubber. The book is in four parts, and is written in an accessible, non-academic style. I found the first three parts of the book, which cover the impact of the Columbian Exchange on the Atlantic, the Pacific and Europe, respectively, to be captivating. These parts of the book demonstrated the fascinating interconnectedness of all things in a globalized society (in other words the “butterfly effect”) – for example, how transporting the sweet potato to Western China led to population migrations from Eastern to Western China, deforestation and overflowing of the Yellow River. The general result of such biological globalization is the creation of the Homogenocene epoch, a term which Mann uses to describe the biological homogenization that has replaced biological diversity since the time of Columbus. In the first three parts of the book, Mann demonstrates how history, biology and chemistry are all interrelated, and how today’s world continues to be influenced by the Columbian Exchange. I found the last part of the book to be less impressive than the first three parts. Part Four is called “Africa in the World,” but confusingly it is about South America, not Africa. Parts of it read more like travel writing than history. Still, the book deserves five stars for the first three thrilling parts, which successfully trace the mesmerizing history of various everyday biological substances.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2017
J
Verified Purchase
Jamie Barnett
New York, US
★★★★★ 3
There were periods I was on the edge of my seat. There were times I just wanted to the book to end.
Format: Paperback
I recently started reading at 40 years old to make up for a lot of wasted time and missed education. This is a very informative read, but that said, I had a hard time staying focused sometimes. He gets into a lot of the science pertaining to plagues, epidemics etc which is interesting and I am reluctant to list science as a con as I did learn, but frequently found myself scrolling through several pages just to get the main idea behind the historical part. There were periods that I was on the edge of my seat and there were times I just wanted to the book to end. 1491 was similar. Both useful books, but a bit challenging to follow along especially if you are only reading small amounts at at time like on break at work etc. It jumps around from S. America, N America and China all through the book. I would have preferred that each region be separated. I get that he had his reasons. I am glad I read both books, but I probably should have gone with more of an overview vs the more in-depth content in this. I do not regret reading both books however, and recommend if you already have a good knowledge of this subject and are just trying to learn a little more. I found the information about the slave trade, the most interesting and wasn't aware that the majority of slaves shipped over from Africa went to Mesoamerica and the Caribbean. I also did not realize that plague and sickness really enabled use of African slaves as they were not prone to malaria like the Europeans. There is also some good info about ancient China and also sliver and mercury mining with South American Indians which made the book worth it for me.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on March 7, 2023
R
Verified Purchase
R. D. Morris
Battle Creek, US
★★★★★ 4
If you liked 1491, you'll like 1493
Format: Hardcover
I originally read the first edition of 1491, which I loved. So that's why I ordered 1493. At about the same time 1493 arrived, I found out there was a new, revised version of 1491, which my husband bought from another source. So I re-read it at the same time I read 1493 for the first time. The reason I mention this is that there are some similarities between the revised version of 1491 and the newer book, 1493 - actually some repeated material. That's ok, as the author is taking the premise of 1491 another step further. Essentially, 1491 focuses on what new studies show was really going on in the Western Hemisphere before Columbus' arrival, where native peoples were far more numerous and had more advanced cultures than Europeans previously thought possible. In 1493, Charles Mann shows not only how Columbus and Europeans changed the New World, but how the "Columbian exchange" wrought great changes in the other direction as well. And he pulls in the further exchanges with Asia, to show the trans-global linkages of the phenomenon. So, some of his exposition gets a little repetitious, but overall he's an engaging writer, and for those of us who love the history of cultural exchanges and first contact, these books are mandatory reading!
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on October 5, 2011
I
Verified Purchase
Ian T
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 5
Truly worth every penny. DS2r?
Format: Hardcover
Truly incredible documentation of the thoughtful work of a handful of artists. I'm hoping that by supporting this book we may inch ourselves closer to a Dead Space 2 remake lead by Motive studio. This book is a must for fans or the game and horror in general. Well made, good quality images, lore drops, developer letters. Its fantastic!
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on May 15, 2025
A
Verified Purchase
Amazon Customer
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 5
Nice art
Format: Hardcover
The art is good and I love the comparisons to the og
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on October 12, 2025

recommand products