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I'm not locked in here with you, you are locked in here with me.
https://www.thomann.de/gb/taylor_guitar_humidifier.htm?glp=1&gclid=COiXvZK9ydMCFY8Q0wodRzACvg
I have a hygrometer in the room where my acoustics are kept - the RH sometimes drops below 35% in the coldest months - which is definitely too low if sustained over a reasonable length of time. This morning it was 41% - couple of towels drying in there have bright it up to 43%.
That's how I usually deal with it - rather than using humidifiers.
You need to know what the humidity is first, before you go about attempting to control it. Much of the advice you read emanates from the USA, where they have dry summers and whack the heating up during long and cold winters. Over here we have damp summers interspersed with a week or so of dry weather every now and again, and usually a rainy and not too cold winter. Humidity in my house is often around 60% and my guitar has shown symptoms of absorbing water (bellying up of the top so that the action raises) even though it lives in a case.
Threads on this subject always seem to throw up very different opinions so really the only way forward is to buy a hygrometer and see what your situation is.
You can take it a step further and get a Planet Waves Humiditrak which will tell you what's going in inside your case via Bluetooth and an app.