Thursday, February 5, 2009

lighting details...

I'm thinking I might want to switch out the ligh fixture in the 'breakfast nook' (nook? um, I know I won't have an actual dining ROOM, but does that mean it can't graduate from breakfast to an all-meal eating area? Regardless, it will be where my only dining table will be). I paid to have all my lighting fixtures done in oil-rubbed bronze, but the one above the table seems a bit blah to me. I think it'd give the area a lot more ambiance to put in a cute rustic-y candleabra chandelier type thing. A simple one, but enough to have character...


Here is what it comes with, except imagine a darker finish (as opposed to the satin nickel)...


Here's some inspiration... what I'm not sure of is how big a fixture would be appropriate for the space. The one it comes with is just a smallish glass bowl thing, so I would lean toward the smallest 3-shade one, but maybe that's not dramatic enough for me.

HGTV has a formula for determining how large a chandelier should be - based first on the room dimension and then on the table dimensions. I don't know how big my table is (it's been banished to the garage until the house is done) - relatively small I think... and the 'room' is really one long(ish) combo of kitchen, dining/breakfast'nook'/living room. I can tell you it's 11'6" wide (i.e., from the patio door to the garage door).


I know photos are great, but the plain chandelier on a white background doesn't give the best mental imaging, so to push it even further, here is some quick and dirty photoshopping. Keep in mind I have no idea if these are true to scale! Hmmm... something to think about, anyway.











Mom didn't like the fake white candles... here's one with black.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

personally, i think you have to be more careful as to how big the fixture is in relation to the table. If the fixture is more than half the size of the table (diameter), it will look overpowering. Probably not what you want to hear, but I think the 5 shade fixture is going to be too big, if your table is about the size of the one in the photo.