Home Decorating

Decorating with Chandeliers

 

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Select lamps, fixtures, and bulbs for your home that will work together to create safe, useful lighting to compliment your furnishings, create the mood you want, and increase the value of your home.

Lighting: Creative planning

Lighting: Creative Planning for Successful Lighting Solutions

Chandeliers are designed to float in a room as an important part of the decor. Too large and this fixture will overpower the space. Too small and it will look out of place.

“Placing a chandelier that is too small in a space is likely the biggest mistake because it's very noticeable,” says Joe Rey-Barreau, educational consultant for the American Lighting Association (ALA) and assistant professor of interior design at the University of Kentucky. “Great designers, therefore, tend to make their decisions on fixtures that may appear slightly larger than might be appropriate. It's generally always best to make the mistake on a fixture being too big than too small.”

Complete lighting design

Complete Lighting Design: A Practical Guide for Perfect Lighting

To make sure your chandelier is the right size for the room in which it will hang, consider the following questions.

How high is your ceiling? Taller ceilings demand larger fixtures.

What is the size and shape of your table? Island? The chandelier should complement, not overpower, anything you plan to suspend it over.

How big is the room you are trying to illuminate? Again, be sure the chandelier is not too big or too small for the room.

What is the form and design of the chandelier? Light, airy fixtures tend to look larger.

 

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Chandeliers look good with the taller ceilings of todays homesChandeliers Create Drama in Home Decorating

The chandelier used to mark your arrival. Clad in crystal, it met you in the foyer of a well-appointed home, and then dazzled you from a power position over the dining room table.

Rarely did you find a chandelier in a starter home. To see them illuminating any room other than one used for entry or dining, more unusual still.

My, how times have changed.

Today chandeliers rate as a brilliant idea just about anywhere - from modest homes to magnificent mansions, contemporary digs to traditional houses. They dangle decorously in almost every room of the house.

Credit our bigger-is-better building boom. Taller ceilings and increased volume in today’s homes means chandeliers are less likely to crowd a room.

“Nine-and-10-foot ceilings almost demand something hanging to fill the space,” says Joe Rey-Barreau, educational consultant for the American Lighting Association (ALA) and assistant professor of interior design at the University of Kentucky. The ALA is a nonprofit organization dedicated to expanding public knowledge about lighting in the United States and Canada.

Colourful chandeliers create drama in the kitchen. Teeny ones provide elegance to powder rooms. Even walk-in closets go upscale when lit with a small chandelier.

“Beyond laundry rooms and garages, any room is an open target for hanging a chandelier,” adds Rey-Barreau. “More commonly, kitchens and bathrooms have become the popular locations for chandeliers.”

Chandeliers add twinkle to a boudoir. “People are treating their bedroom suites as more luxurious personal spaces with elaborate bathroom areas, so it is not unreasonable to consider chandeliers there, either,” says Dan Blitzer, director of education for the ALA.

“Chandelettes,” or mini chandeliers, add a new sense of intimacy to small rooms and to corner spaces and alcoves of larger ones. “Minis are even being used as wall sconces in some instances - and they look fantastic,” says lighting and furniture designer Sergio Orozco, whose offices are in New York City.

These compact chandeliers are 9 to12 inches in diameter to slip easily into tight spaces. For added impact, consider grouping them.

“You can hang two small ones over a kitchen counter and the result is gorgeous,” says Eileen Schonbek-Beer, with Schonbek Worldwide Lighting, which has been making crystal chandeliers for 134 years. “These smaller chandeliers also work in more modest homes or where there are 8-foot ceilings.”

Chandeliers have also sized up to accommodate the soaring foyers and sweeping two-story spaces of larger homes. “The demand for massive chandeliers to fill these areas has also increased,” says Schonbek-Beer. “A 20-foot ceiling today is no longer unusual.”

The experts at the American Lighting Association have spotted the following trends in chandeliers:

Mixed Messages

Mixing of materials and styles within one fixture is now a common design trend. It is not unusual, for example, to find a rustic cast-iron fixture with crystals hanging from it, or different metals and types of glass all incorporated into one fixture.

“American styles are decidedly eclectic and homeowners today are very comfortable mixing styles,” says Blitzer. “Chandeliers lend themselves neatly to that process. You can look for a chandelier that is inspired by the period reflected in the room you are putting it, but you don’t have to. Many contemporary designs are a blend of traditional elements with modern materials - glass and alabaster with polished chrome or satin nickel, which makes them work with a variety of styles.”

Color Me Beautiful

While sparkling clear crystal refracts and reflects light, designers offer chandeliers in a rainbow of shades to complement decor. Colored crystal can combine with clear to create a prism of hue. Smokey quartz, rock crystal and amethyst offer an antique feel.

Finish Line

Chandeliers no longer feature just one metal or just one finish. The latest looks offer multi-tone finishes created by painted or chemical processes.

Mod Squad

The freshest face in chandeliers is clean and simple, designed to work in more contemporary spaces. “We just introduced a dramatic new category of crystal product that is very contemporary,” says Schonbek. “It features colored crystal geometric shapes - cubes, rectangles, spirals, pyramids. The colours mix together to create auras of light for a vibrant rich look.” 

Dim Lit

Whether they are ornate and multi-armed or simply feature a large-scale bowl, chandeliers need a dimmer so homeowners can control the intensity of light. “Most of the time, the lighting capability of a chandelier is more than is actually necessary to light the space,” says Rey-Barreua. “They should always be controlled by a dimmer to add to the aesthetic appeal.”

Match Point

Once a design preference has been identified, the chandelier should simply be another decorative element. “There is a trend to eclectic interiors where traditional, transitional and modern will blur even within the same room,” says Rey-Barreau. “The chandelier doesn't need to "match" the decor in a very rigid manner. If it works visually for the user, then it's fine.”

Shopping for a Chandelier

Fashionable and functional, chandeliers should be incorporated into the home just as any decorative accessory or object of art would be chosen.

“I would urge consumers to view this purchase with same enjoyment they would use in buying fine furniture,” says Dan Blitzer, educational consultant for the American Lighting Association. “A fine chandelier is an investment that will add to the value of your home.”

To find the right style chandelier for your home, simply begin with a colour or a material that is predominant in the decoration scheme of the room. What catches your eye in the room? What type of statement do you want to make? If the room is more traditional, choose chandeliers with more ornamentation and decorative details. If your home is modern, opt for less ornamentation and simpler details.

If the choices are not clear, it's always best to rely on the help of a lighting consultant in a lighting showroom to help guide the decision. “Sometimes, it's simply a matter of choosing what feels good,” says Joe Rey-Barreau. “Lighting consultants often have design backgrounds and help move you in the right direction.”

When shopping for a chandelier, the American Lighting Association suggests the following tips to help you find the fixture of your dreams.

Be prepared: Visit lighting showrooms armed with a photo or sketch of space you are trying to light. “Fabrics, photos of furniture, or images of the house are of great help in this process,” says Rey-Barreau. “And don’t forget to ask the sales associate for assistance.”

Check it out: Scrutinize the chandelier before buying. Look at detail and finish quality. Castings should be neat out of the mould so they look clean. Shades or other attachments should sit neatly in a plumb fashion. Ask the cut and quality of the crystal and durability of finishes.

Light it right: Be sure to choose the correct light bulbs for your particular chandelier. According to the experts, clear bulbs in chandeliers with exposed bulbs, or crystal glass enclosures will enhance sparkle. In chandeliers with linen shades, frosted bulbs cast a pleasing glow and won’t create shadows.

Buy a few extra light bulbs for chandeliers at the time of purchase. Nothing’s worse than having a bulb go out right before a dinner party!

Weight There: Always consider the weight of the chandelier. Chandeliers heavier than 50 pounds have to be mounted more securely to the house’s structure. “This is a criterion of the National Electrical Code, and the electrician hanging the fixture should be aware of this,” says Rey-Barreau. “It doesn't hurt to remind them, however.”

More is more: Don’t let a chandelier stand alone in a room. Like a star, they need a supporting cast of characters to help them do their job. “A chandelier needs supplemental lighting around it," says Blitzer. "Don’t sweat to find the one fixture that does everything. It is best to achieve a layer of light in the rooms with sconces, table and floor lamps.”

For more information or to find a lighting showroom near you, call toll free (800) BRIGHT IDEAS or visit americanlightingassoc.com. Courtesy of ARA Content

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