The 5 Most Common Home Lighting Mistakes

Lighting your home is not as easy as it might sound. It’s not simply a case of screwing in a few bulbs and fitting a couple of LEDs. If you’re going to doing it properly and bring out the best in your abode, you need to consider a few crucial factors.

You want to bring out the best qualities of your living room, bathroom, dining room and bedrooms, right? Well, in that case, there are few mistakes you need to be aware of when it comes to bringing a touch of illumination to your home – so you don’t end up making any of these lighting faux pas yourself.

Over-Use Of Recessed Downlights

One of the most common errors made with home lighting is installing recessed downlights (or ‘can lights’, as they’re also called) everywhere. People very often assume that laying out lots of downlights in a grid formation provides the maximum light and looks ‘modern’, neither of which is true.

Firstly, the modern look is all about minimalism so it’s better to have a few well-placed lights than lots of them thrown across your entire ceiling. Then there’s the simple fact that downlights don’t actually emit that much light!

Furthermore, downlights usual don’t provide sufficient light on vertical surfaces, which is where the eye normally perceives light. An array of downlights can, in fact, waste almost half your wattage and still leave the area insufficiently lit and in a certain amount of darkness.

Over-Use Of Task Lights

There are plenty of better ways to light the kitchen or bathroom than by fitting them with a horde of task lights. Fluorescent , xenon or LED task lights under cabinets and at the sides of mirrors provide plenty of light, but use too many and the space will start to look clinical.

Instead of putting task lighting on every available surface, think about how you use the kitchen or bathroom – do you always chop food right next to the hob for example? Add task lighting here. Do you actually apply your makeup in your bedroom rather than the bathroom? Then there’s no task lighting needed above the bathroom mirror!

Insufficient Dimming 

Another common lighting mistake is to use incandescent or halogen sources without dimming. ‘Green’ lighting options such as LED may be all the rage but incandescent is still a viable part of lighting in a residence, provided it is dimmable. By dimming, you decrease energy and heat output and also lengthen the lamp life.

candles

 

Using Light as Decoration

When it comes to home lighting, you should always think about light as an actual dimension, imagining the distribution and output of lights from each fixture, as well as other aspects such as the colour light that will shine out, be it bright white, mellow yellow or something in between.

Decorating with light fixtures such as that ‘pretty lamp’ can often result in a waste of energy and ultimately a darker, less well-lit room. If you’re stuck for ideas you might want to consider consulting a lighting designer who may be able to give you some useful hints as to how you can make the most of your living space through a more considered use of light, which could also result in you saving energy and money.

 

Not Using a Combination

Different rooms and different spaces within a room require different types of light. Ambient lighting is the general light in a room that sets the ‘mood’ – and stops you tripping over things! Task lighting provides a focused, defined light for things such as shaving or reading. Accent lighting is usually used to highlight architectural features, artwork, ceramics or paintings you want to show off.

Don’t just use one type of light but a combination of all three (and each in the right place) as this gives you a greater depth and dynamic of light sources, provides greater functionality and above all is more aesthetically pleasing.

These are just a few common lighting mistakes made in the home, but I’m sure there are plenty more – like using skylights in places that don’t get natural light! Have you experienced any of your own lighting faux pas and what have you done to rectify them?

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The 4 Point Guide To Buying A New Bathroom Suite

Redesigning a bathroom is an excellent way to practice your interior design skills before moving on to a large living room or kitchen project. One of the most important decisions that you’re going to be making is deciding on your new bathroom suite. So, before you hit the bathroom showrooms, here are some things that you need to consider…

Make Sure it Fits…

Make sure that the bathroom suite you choose fits your bathroom, both in size and stylistically.

There is an awful lot of choice when it comes to bathroom suites, and it’s easy to get overwhelmed in the bathroom showroom, having a clear idea of what you want will help prevent that.

It’s a pretty good idea to have a scale plan of your bathroom to take shopping with you, that way you can get an idea of how a suite will look in your particular room.

Be Neutral…

Bathroom suites are an expensive purchase, which means that for most people they’re a long-term investment. The key to keeping your bathroom looking new and modern is choosing something that’s neutral. Plain colors, such as white, and clean lines make for a neutral bathroom suite. Remember that additions such as taps, vanity cupboards and tiling will all change the look of your bathroom, and will be easier to change and redesign over time. If you choose a neutral suite, you can keep the suite whilst changing around the vanities and tiles, for example, to give your bathroom a new look after a couple of years.

Separate or All in One…

Generally, buying a bathroom suite will be cheaper than buying the pieces individually, although this isn’t always the case. If you want something special, like a steel bath, for example, you’re probably going to find yourself having to buy each piece separately. The advantage to all in one buying is that you know everything matches, and a visit to a showroom will let you see how all the pieces look together. Buying things separately involves a little more guesswork.

How Do You Use Your Bathroom?

It’s a good idea to think about how your bathroom is used before you start thinking about buying a suite. If you always shower and never take baths, then you might want to skip buying a bath and instead have more space for a larger shower enclosure. It’s also important, even at this early stage, that you consider the kind of taps that you’re going to buy. The decision between mixer taps and two single taps will affect the kind of sink and bath that you can buy, since tap holes are usually pre drilled into both. And if you decide to go with more modern high taps, that are extremely fashionable nowadays, then you’re going to need a bigger sink in order to accommodate the splash back that comes from these taps. It’s never too early to start thinking about how everything will come together.

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Tips for Making Your Home More Secure

burglar alarm

Security is something that every home-owner should take seriously. The vast majority of burglaries are opportunistic ones where burglars enter a victim’s home via a weak or unlocked door or an open window. If your home does not present such obvious entry routes for a burglar, then it is likely that they will move on to an easier target. Here are some tips to help make your home look less appealing to criminals.

1. Lock your windows

Get into the habit of locking your windows at night, as well as locking them whenever you go out during the day. Don’t assume that it’s safe to leave upstairs windows open; a resourceful burglar may grab a nearby ladder and use that to gain entry to your home.

2. Invest in strong, sturdy doors and high quality locks

If your front door is flimsy, or has a weak lock, it would be trivial for a would-be burglar to kick down the door while you were away on holiday. Consider replacing your door frame, fitting a good deadbolt, and/or getting a door with a steel core for maximum security.

3. Take extra measures to secure sliding doors

Sliding doors, such as the ones that are used on most conservatories, are easy to force open. The good news is you can make them a lot more secure without having to spend a fortune. Placing a wooden brook handle in the track will prevent people from being able to open the door from the outside. For a more discrete form of security, drill a small hole in the middle of the doors and insert a metal pin to keep the doors “locked” together.

4. Make sure your yard is well-lit

Dark yards and big hedges are a burglar’s ideal surroundings. Don’t give burglars the chance to work in peace. Install motion-sensing lights in your yard so that anyone entering it will be noticed immediately.

5. Install a burglar alarm, and use it

Burglar alarms are a good deterrent against casual intruders. Installing a burglar alarm could save you money on your home contents insurance too. Be sure to use your alarm every time you leave the house. If you are broken into and you had forgotten to arm your alarm before leaving the house, then your insurance company may refuse to pay out.

6. Keep expensive possessions out of view of your windows

A burglar is more likely to target a house with a plasma TV, two games consoles and a bunch of expensive jewellery on the bedside table than they are a “normal” house where the only things on display are a sofa and a vase full of flowers. Hang net curtains to stop people from peeking into your home, and be discrete about expensive purchases. If you post details of your expensive home entertainment system purchase on Facebook then you are basically advertising your possessions to potential thieves who will jump at the chance to break in the next time your home is vacant.

7. Put your mail on hold when you go away on holiday

A stack of un-touched mail in the porch (or worse, hanging out of your mailbox) is an open invitation for burglars. If you’re going to be away from home for more than a few days, either put your mail on hold or ask a trusted neighbour to collect it for you.

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6 Tech Gadgets to Liven Up Your Bathroom

high tech bathroom

When all’s said and done, the bathroom isn’t the most exciting room of the house to be in. Once you’ve performed your daily ablutions there’s little reason to make return visits – or is there?

This is the 21st century, the age of technology, gadgets and gizmos, after all. Nothing and nobody is safe from a techy makeover, and that includes the bathroom.

So while you’ve got the latest apps on your phone and the largest plasma TV screen mounted on your living room wall, now you can marvel and delight in the cornucopia of practical gadgets, and items those boffins have wracked their brains to come up with to make your visit to the bathroom a more up-to-date and fun one.

Here are six innovative extras that would sit quite nicely alongside your bath mats and wall lighting…

TV Mirror

From Eastenders to X Factor there’s no denying  we’re a nation of tele addicts, so for those who find it difficult to drag themselves away from the gogglebox, the Eclipse TV Monitor could be answer to all your terrestrial dreams.

It embeds an LCD TV behind a two-way bathroom mirror so you can relax in the tub with your favourite show. When the TV is off you can’t see it at all, leaving you go about your merry way shaving or brushing your teeth without the mortifying early morning horror of Daybreak’s Aled Jones gurning at you.

high tech shower

Techie Taps

Turning the tap on isn’t the most arduous of tasks, but for the more indolent bathroom users there’s the ‘intelligent tap’, which uses facial recognition to adjust the flow and heat of the water as necessary.  It also has a touchscreen so you can access your emails.

Top Teeth

When it comes to your daily bathroom ablutions, oral hygiene is top of the list, so next time you want to add some sparkle and shine to those molars you might want to reach for the Oral B Professional Care Smart Series 5000. It has a smart guide that contains an itinerary for brushing times and pressure, as well as a few gnasher-based top tips.

Apps The Way To Do It

For those techies who truly are inseparable from their iPod and the glories of its multifaceted applications, how about the Stocco Matre touchscreen mirror? It has a specially designed, integrated touch panel that lets you access your music and any other features you want.

Handily for a bathroom accessory, it also has a built-in barometer, lighting controls, and, if things are getting a little too steamy in there, a mirror de-fogger.

TV in bathroom

Down The Pan

Whether it’s a number one or number two, some of us are still embarrassed by Mother Nature’s inevitable sounds from a bladder release or bowel transit. Step forward the iPhone Eco-Oto app which plays the inimitable gurgles of a flushing toilet from 30 to 120 seconds!

Head Lights

Create your own multi-coloured illuminations with a shower head fitted with colour-changing LED lights that tell you the water temperature – green for cold, blue for warm, and red for hot. And once the water’s to a temperature of your liking you can adjust the colour to suit your mood (if there’s such a thing as a green, blue or red mood, that is). An ingenious use of bathroom lighting if ever there was one.

I’m sure if you had any of these accessories in your bathroom you’d have to be dragged kicking and screaming from your early morning preparations!

Have you got any ingenious techie gadgets in your bathroom?

Estelle Page is an interior designer who is always looking for ways to combine inventiveness and practicality!

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Nocturnal Sky in Your Bedroom: Solutions from $2 to $300

night sky

Falling asleep under a star-filled sky is no longer an exclusivity reserved for those warm midsummer nights, when so many of us like to stay awake deep into the night to lie at the back of our garden and stargaze.

With technologies (and this interior design trend) advancing, you can easily replicate whole galaxies in your bedroom at a price that suits your wallet, ranging from just a couple of bucks to several hundreds for a more deluxe effect. Here are the five most common choices:

 

1) Glow-in-the-Dark Stars (from $2)

If you’re looking for the cheapest and least painful of solutions (especially if you aren’t sure if you want to commit to staring into the Galaxy for the rest of your days), phosphorescent wall decals of stars, planets, saucers and crescent moons are probably your best bet.

Easily applicable and removable, they come as stickers or plastic glow-in-the-dark shapes with sticky pads. They vary in style and colour and will have zero effect on your energy bill. You won’t have to worry about switching the lights off either – kids love them, especially those who can’t sleep without a nightlight!

 

2) Glow-in-the-Dark Ceiling Paint (from $3)

If you find glow-in-the-dark stickers too childish for your age but you’re quite confident about your artistic abilities, you may as well make a custom pattern for your bedroom’s nocturnal sky with glow-in-the-dark ceiling paint.

It’s used just like normal acrylic, although spray paint is also available for those who prefer stencilling to replicate the whole universe right above your bed.

 

3) Hire an Artist (variable)

Believe it or not, because nocturnal sky replicas are so much in demand these days there are a bunch of artists making their living painting galaxy murals on people’s bedrooms ceilings! They use glow in the dark paint too, but if you art skills aren’t all that it might be worth paying out for someone else to do the work for you.

 

4) Night Sky Projectors ($10 to over $100)

Night sky projectors are also quite varied in price, depending on how realistic you want the whole stargazing experience to be. While the cheapest options come in the tackiest pinks and neon greens, if you’re happy to invest a little more you may as well find a projector that matches your chrome wall lights, too.

Besides being prettier to look at, the more advanced ones offer a number of exciting features, such as several speed settings, shooting star functions, changeable slides and even Northern and Southern hemisphere perspectives. Some of them can even be programmed to switch themselves off, making sure no energy is wasted after you’ve finally drifted off to sleep.

 

5) Fibre Optics Star Ceiling Kits (From $300)

The most expensive yet probably the most aesthetically pleasing, optical fibre is a great way to bring the night sky into your bedroom. Slightly thicker than a human hair, the fibres concentrate the light into tiny spots at the end of each strand, giving the “stars” more of a natural twinkle and glow.

Using fibre with bare ends will make the stars appear sharper and brighter; however, the light they emit can also be diffused through lenses, giving a larger star effect.

As they’re becoming increasingly popular, sets of these are widely available online, however they do also require a lot of DIY and you have to have access to space above the ceiling. A popular complement to these is National Geographic’s “Moon in My Room” – a 3D model of the Moon, designed to be mounted on a bedroom wall. It can be switched between the twelve phases for a truly realistic night sky!

Would you ever install any of these in your bedroom?

Estelle Page is a blogger and an interior designer who decided not all presents should go under a tree, and surprised her younger offspring this Christmas with a newly refurbished bedroom – complete with indoor night sky! 

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