Home Lighting Design: How to Light Every Room Like a Designer | Georgia Home Design
Layer ambient, task, and accent lighting to transform any room from flat to dimensional. Includes a room-by-room guide.
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Home Lighting Design: How to Light Every Room Like a Designer
The Three Layers of Light
1. Ambient (General) Light
The overall illumination in a room. Ceiling-mounted fixtures, recessed pot lights, and chandeliers provide ambient light. This is your base layer that allows you to see and move safely.
2. Task Light
Directed light for specific activities: reading, cooking, grooming, working. Table lamps, under-cabinet lights, desk lamps, and vanity lights are task lighting.
3. Accent Light
Decorative light that highlights features and creates atmosphere. Wall sconces, picture lights, LED strip lights, and uplighting are accent lighting. This layer adds drama, depth, and personality.
The rule: Every room should have all three layers, controlled independently on separate switches or dimmers.
For more on this topic, see our guide on Small Space Interior Design, 15 Expert Tips to Make Any Room Feel Bigger.
Room-by-Room Guide
For more on this topic, see our guide on Open Concept Kitchen and Living Room, How to Make It Actually Work.
Living Room
- Ambient: Recessed pot lights on a dimmer (avoid the single central ceiling fixture, it creates flat, unflattering light)
- Task: Floor lamp or table lamp near reading chairs
- Accent: Wall sconces, LED strip lighting behind the TV or under shelving, candles
Kitchen
- Ambient: Recessed pot lights evenly distributed
- Task: Under-cabinet lights illuminating the countertop (essential for food preparation)
- Accent: Pendant lights over the island (these are both task and accent), in-cabinet lighting for glass-front cabinets
Bedroom
- Ambient: Ceiling fixture on a dimmer (or skip entirely and use table lamps)
- Task: Bedside table lamps (one per side, with individual switches)
- Accent: Wall sconces, LED strip under the bed frame, fairy lights
Bathroom
- Ambient: Recessed pot lights on a dimmer
- Task: Vanity lights mounted at face height on either side of the mirror (NOT above the mirror, which creates shadows under the eyes and chin)
- Accent: LED strip under a floating vanity, candles
Colour Temperature
- 2700K (warm white): Living rooms, bedrooms, dining rooms. Warm, cosy, flattering to skin tones.
- 3000K (soft white): Kitchens, bathrooms. Slightly brighter but still warm.
- 3500-4000K (neutral): Home offices, garages, laundry rooms. Clean and energising.
- 5000K+ (daylight): Avoid in living spaces. Too clinical and harsh for homes.