Interior Lighting
Every light that lives indoors, in one place
The whole interior range, organised the way you'd walk through a house. Ceiling, wall, table, floor, pendant, bathroom, spotlight — all the fittings that make a room feel finished.
How interior lighting actually works
A well-lit room rarely comes from a single ceiling light. It comes from layers — three of them, usually:
Ambient light is the general fill that makes the room usable: the ceiling light, a central pendant, or a chandelier. One source, doing the heavy lifting.
Task light is the directional, focused light you need for specific jobs — reading, cooking, shaving, working. Floor lamps beside a reading chair, wall lights either side of a bed, undercabinet strips over a worktop, adjustable desk lamps.
Accent light is the mood and style layer. Soft table lamps, picture lights on artwork, decorative wall fittings that throw shape onto the walls. Not strictly necessary for function — but the reason rooms feel warm and considered rather than just lit.
Every category in this range fits one or more of those three jobs. The most common mistake is relying only on ambient — one bright ceiling fitting trying to do all three layers. The second most common is buying decorative accent lighting without a proper ambient layer underneath. Either way, the room fights you.
Picking by room
Living room: ambient from a central pendant, ceiling light or chandelier; two or three table and floor lamps at seating height for the warm layer; wall lights beside a fireplace or behind a sofa for accent.
Bedroom: softer central fitting, often semi-flush rather than a deep pendant; bedside readers (either table lamps or wall lights) for task; accent pieces on dressing tables or shelves.
Kitchen: bright central ceiling light or a run of downlights for ambient; bar pendants over an island for task; under-cabinet strips for worktops.
Dining room: a single statement pendant or chandelier centred over the table, on a dimmer; wall lights or a sideboard lamp for softer evening light.
Hallway: a series of small ceiling lights, wall lights at eye level, and a table lamp on a console to warm the space.
Bathroom: IP-rated fittings throughout — see the dedicated bathroom range for zones and ratings.
Styles that run across the range
The interior range covers a broad style spectrum: modern, traditional, classic, Scandinavian, rustic,
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