Due to the high resistance/reactance (R/X) ratio of a low-voltage microgrid (LVMG), virtual complex impedance-based P-V/Q-ω droop control is adopted in this article as the primary control (PC) technique for stabilizing the system. A distributed event-triggered restoration mechanism (ETSM) is proposed as the secondary control (SC) technique to restore the output-voltage frequency and improve power sharing accuracy. The proposed ETSM ensures that neighboring communication happens only at some discrete instants when a predefined event-triggering condition (ETC) is fulfilled. In general, the design of the ETC is the crucial challenge of an event-triggered mechanism (ETM). Thus, in this article, a static ETM (SETM) is proposed as the ETC at first, where two static parameters are utilized to reduce the triggering frequency. Bounded stability is ensured under the SETM, which means that the output-voltage frequency is restored to the vicinity of its nominal value, and close to fair utilization of the distributed generators (DGs) is achieved. To further improve the power sharing accuracy and accelerate the regulation process, a dynamic ETM (DETM) is then introduced. In the DETM, two dynamic parameters that converge to zero in the steady state are designed, which promises asymptotic stability of the system. Besides, Zeno behavior is excluded in both mechanisms. An LVMG consisting of four DGs is constructed in MATLAB/Simulink to illustrate the effectiveness of the proposed methods, and the simulations correspond with our theoretical analysis.