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Lights, please

Ditch the harsh overhead bulb. A considered lighting scheme — dimmers, pendants, mirrors and candlelight in the right corners — can transform any home from flat to flattering.

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Illustrator

1.
Pull the plug on the ceiling light

Non-dimmable, non-adjustable ceiling lights should be a non-starter when you’re planning the lighting of your home. The first step in your scheme should be taking back control of your lighting sources. Look to hanging pendants, sconces and directional standing lamps whose glows can be easily adjusted.

Person pulling on a rope to turn off a ceiling light fixture in a blue room

2.
Take a dim view

The dimmer rose to fame during the 1960s. This tool should never have fallen out of fashion: it makes switching up the atmosphere in your home a breeze. Dim it down for a flattering glow during date night and then back up again to clean up the mess the following day.

Man in blue sweater holding coffee cup and adjusting wall-mounted dimmer switch in orange room

3.
Deploy mirrors to add some depth

Interior designers swear by smart mirror placement to make a small home seem roomier and to amplify both artificial and natural light. The design need not be ornate; a large ash-framed mirror can be an illuminating addition to your pad.

Table lamp and vintage radio on surface against orange background

4.
Use candles and oil lamps

We’ve all been to parties at which hosts have overdone the candles and caught our coat-tails on tiny corridor flames or extinguished one closing a bathroom door. Place oil lamps and candles in quieter corners to create cosiness. But don’t rely on them to do your scheme’s heavy lifting.

Lit oil lamp with glass chimney and flame on a white circular surface against blue background

5.
Give your meals some elegance with a pendant light

The dining table should be the heart and soul of your home and the lighting should accentuate this importance. Harness a hanging pendant – or look to be ambitious and cluster a few above the space where you’ll entertain guests – to enhance its warmth, helping you to enjoy many a memorable meal.

Modern dining room with pendant light over white table, chairs, and sideboard with bottles and coffee cup

6.
Drop the LED bulbs

While some of us go to extreme methods to acquire largely banned iridescent lightbulbs and the rich, warm glow that they offer, LED light sources are improving. This being said, most LED lighbulbs are too bright and can create an unflattering environment. You can soften the tone by placing them in an Ozeki paper lantern.

Paper lantern pendant light with horizontal stripes hanging above bookshelf

7.
Take cues from the Nordics

If you want to cheat our instructions, hop on a plane to Stockholm or Helsinki and do a spot of late-night window peeping (not the naughty kind) in a Nordic nation’s winter months. You’ll find yourself looking into a moody menagerie of masterfully toned lighting emitted from Finnish Secto wall lamps and Swedish Karlskrona oil lamps.

Modern pendant lamp with dark cap casting light downward against orange gradient background

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