Michael, yours works because you keep it to a relatively narrow RH range. If it begins to be exposed to very high or very low RH environments for extended periods, all bets are off. But the beauty of these is that if/when that happens, you just make a new one, and that's the reason I'm commenting on this thread; these things are fine, and cute and every visitor to your shop will enjoy seeing and learning about it, but don't rely on it as your fail-safe, month to month, year to year hygrometer, because they do have a limited shelf life, and they do need to be checked against a known RH from time to time. So, think of these as an addition to the little "family" of hygrometers I would hope you all have in your shops.
And please, please, PLEASE, find a more accurate "known" RH than the weatherman on TV or the radio! Unless you live next door from the weather station they are getting their figures from, the information they give regarding RH is utterly useless. RH can and will change dramatically within short distances. Ever been driving down the road on a cool pre-dawn morning, and went-through a slight dip in the road, and suddenly had to hit the wipers because your windshield suddenly is covered in moisture? That's dew, and that happened because the air in the 4 foot deep "dip" in the road was a wee tad cooler and had a higher RH than the air in the higher part of the road. See what I mean? If you live even a few feet lower in elevation than the weather station, your RH will be very different. Farmers who live in rolling-hill country know this all too well, too; in droughts, the crops in the lower lands will fair better at first because they get more, and longer, dew in the mornings. The flip side is that the same crops are the first ones to see a frost.... And if you happen to live down the road from the airport where the weather station is, and the land is flat, don't count your blessing just yet; if a neighbor or two watered their lawns overnight, they just raised you RH... See my point? Use a better method of calibration than the radio or TV, fercryingoutloud.
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