Back to Home

Gold Finish

Brass, champagne, antique gold

Every lighting fitting in a gold-toned finish — polished brass, brushed brass, champagne gold, antique brass and pale gold. Warm metallic tone currently dominating design-led lighting.

Gold and brass — what's in this range

"Gold finish" in lighting covers a spectrum of warm metallic finishes that all read as gold-toned but differ in exact colour and surface:

Polished brass — yellow-gold, highly reflective. The traditional brass finish. Bright, warm, can feel dated if used heavily but works as a deliberate accent.

Brushed brass — linear directional finish, matt sheen. The dominant modern gold finish — softer than polished brass, practical (hides fingerprints), currently very popular.

Antique brass — aged-look brass with darker patina. Traditional, period, rustic associations.

Champagne gold — slightly cooler and paler than brass. Modern, glamorous. Increasingly common on design-led modern fittings.

Pale gold / satin gold — softer still, less reflective. Contemporary alternative to brass.

Rose gold — warmer pinkish tone. Design trend finish of the late 2010s, still present but less dominant now.

Most fittings in this range are brushed brass or champagne gold — the currently-dominant finishes.

Why gold is currently everywhere

Brushed brass replaced matt black as the "must-have" modern lighting finish around 2018–2020 and has stayed dominant since. A few reasons for the continued appeal:

Warmth without pink — adds warmth to schemes without committing to copper's distinct red-pink tone.

Works with current palettes — pairs beautifully with the deep greens, warm terracottas and muted blues that have dominated recent interior trends.

Hospitality heritage — brass has always been present in premium hospitality (hotels, upscale restaurants). Recent residential design has borrowed from that visual vocabulary.

Feels intentional — brushed brass reads as a considered choice in a way that chrome or black don't. Adds perceived quality.

Where gold-toned fittings work

Modern kitchens with deep colours — deep green, navy or charcoal kitchens look exceptional with brushed brass pendants. One of the current defining combinations.

Warm-palette living rooms — earth tones, terracotta, rich wood tones, warm whites. Brass pulls the palette together.

Design-led bathrooms — brass-finish bathroom lighting (IP-rated) adds warmth that chrome can't match. Pairs with brass taps — but the IP-rated range in brass is narrower than in chrome.

Art Deco and mid-century interiors — brass is central to both. Deco leans polished brass; mid-century leans brushed or antique.

Hollywood Regency and formal modern — brass with crystal, brass with smoked glass, brass with marble. Glamorous modern aesthetic.

Soft minimal and Japandi — pale gold and champagne work in restrained minimal interiors where cooler metals would feel too clinical.

Pairing gold with other finishes

Gold is a warm metal. Pairs comfortably with:

Matt black — the current defining combination. Black as neutral, brass as warm accent.

Natural wood — especially warm-toned walnut, teak and oiled oak.

Deep greens and blues — as kitchen or wall colours with brass fittings.

Marble and stone — especially white marble with brass fittings. Luxury modern combination.

Less successful with chrome and cool-toned metals side-by-side. If using both in a scheme, keep them in distinct areas.

Ageing and lacquering

Brass and gold fittings come in two forms:

Lacquered — clear coating protects the brass from oxidisation. Stays its original colour indefinitely. The default on most modern brass lighting.

Unlacquered (raw) brass — oxidises over time to a darker, more mottled appearance. Some people (and designers) prefer this "living finish" character; others find it looks dirty. Less common on new lighting; more common on heritage and deliberately raw pieces.

Most gold-finish lighting in this range is lacquered or surface-treated for stable long-term appearance. Champagne gold and pale gold finishes are usually powder-coated or electrostatic-sprayed rather than true metallic brass.

Care and cleaning

Lacquered brass — soft dry cloth or slightly damp cloth. Avoid abrasive cleaners and metal polish (the lacquer doesn't need it and abrasives can mark the surface).

Unlacquered brass — brass cleaner restores brightness if desired. Most owners leave it to develop patina.

Champagne and pale gold — these are typically painted finishes, not raw metal. Soft dry cloth only; avoid solvents which can dissolve the coating.

Frequently asked questions

Will brass and gold go out of fashion?

Eventually yes, as all trend finishes do — but brushed brass has had a 5+ year run already with no clear successor. Likely to remain popular for several more years. For longer-term investment, polished chrome and matt black are more timeless.

Should I match brass to my taps?

Helpful but not essential. Matching metals across a room is a general design principle, but mixing a brass pendant with chrome taps works if the brass is a clear accent (one fitting) rather than a competing theme (multiple fittings). Don't mix brass with cold chrome in small spaces.

Is antique brass the same as aged copper?

No — antique brass is yellow-brown with gold undertones; aged copper is reddish-brown with red undertones. Both are "warm aged metal" but clearly different in tone side-by-side. Never mix antique brass with aged copper in the same room.

Related categories

Compare Selected