Elemental LED Names Reps in Carolinas

Elemental LED, Emeryville, Calif., a manufacturer of LED lighting solutions, recently announced partnerships with Bodwell Associates, QLS, and James G. Murphy Co. to extend its Diode LED product brand further into the Carolinas.
Aug. 12, 2016
Elemental LED, Emeryville, Calif., a manufacturer of LED lighting solutions, recently announced partnerships with Bodwell Associates, QLS and James G. Murphy Co. to extend its Diode LED product brand further into the Carolinas. Elemental LED and its manufacturing and wholesale division, Diode LED, provides linear, task, and accent LED lighting solutions for both commercial and residential applications.

Bodwell Associates, Charlotte, N.C., provides lighting solutions to the western North Carolina region. The company has more than 25 years of experience in the lighting market. QLS has served the Raleigh, N.C., region since 2004 and works primarily with lighting designers, architects, engineers, wholesalers, contractors, and building owners offering solutions from the most basic lighting layout, to the most complex project management.  James G. Murphy Co., Greenville, S.C., focuses on the fields of specification, distributor, and contractor lighting sales in South Carolina. 

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Jim Lucy has been wandering through the electrical market for more than 30 years, most of the time as an editor for Electrical Wholesaling, Electrical Marketing newsletter and CEE News. During that time he and the editorial team for the publications have won numerous national awards for their coverage of the electrical business. He showed an early interest in electricity, when as a youth he had an idea for a hot dog cooker. Unfortunately, the first crude prototype malfunctioned and the arc nearly blew him out of his parents' basement. Before becoming an editor for Electrical Wholesaling magazine and Electrical Marketing, he earned a BA degree in journalism and a MA in communications from Glassboro State College, Glassboro, NJ., which is formerly best known as the site of the 1967 summit meeting between President Lyndon Johnson and Russian Premier Aleksei Nikolayevich Kosygin, and now best known as the New Jersey state college that changed its name in 1992 to Rowan University because of a generous $100 million donation by N.J. zillionaire industrialist Henry Rowan. Jim is a Brooklyn-born Jersey Guy happily transplanted in the fertile plains of Kansas for the past 20 years.