Kitchen
Lighting - Mix It Up
By Tim Carter, Askthebuilder.com
Summary: Kitchen lighting will meet all its challenges if you
use an assortment of lighting types. Indirect lighting and direct
lighting in conjunction can maximize the mood in your kitchen,
even on a tight budget. A ceiling fan added in the kitchen will
help make life there a breeze.
Q: I want my new kitchen lighting to be dramatic,
functional and different. To make it a challenge for you, I am
on a tight budget.
Do you have some ideas that will give me what I am looking for?
Do you think a ceiling fan is a good idea in kitchen?
A: The only challenging thing about this project
is the planning aspect. I am quite certain I can deliver on all
of your requests.
If you are lucky enough to have a nine foot tall ceiling in the
kitchen area, the end result is going to take your breath away.
The
importance of kitchen lighting is often overlooked. All too often
a builder or remodeler will just install a series of recessed
lights and/or some surface fixtures to fulfill the need for
general purpose lighting. The modern kitchen is often much more
than
just a work area. It can be a quiet area where you relax by
yourself, a space where two people casually talk and get to know
one another,
or it can be an anteroom that is used to support activities
in an adjacent space. An assortment of lighting types will allow
you
to maximize the mood in your kitchen no matter what you use
it
for.
I feel the most dramatic look you can achieve
in a kitchen is to mix indirect lighting with direct lighting.
Indirect
lighting
is
created by hiding the light source from view. The light produced
by the hidden fixture bounces off a ceiling or a wall and
produces a warm glow that adds enormous amounts of atmosphere if
done
just right. The light fixtures can be hidden on top of or
under wall
cabinets or they can be installed in open troughs or layered
ceiling areas that surround the entire kitchen space. Open
soffits can
be installed in a room with an eight foot ceiling height,
but they look best if the ceiling is nine or even ten feet tall.
Direct
lighting is achieved by using conventional recessed lights, surface
lights or light fixtures that are on a pendant
or chain.
Many ceiling fans can be equipped with decorative light
fixtures as well. These types of lights work well to provide bright
lighting for work surfaces and general purpose lighting
in
the kitchen
area.
To maximize the power and decorative effect of all of the
lights you need to wire and switch them independently.
Different sets
of lights need to have separate controls so that you can
add or delete layers of light as you would peel layers
of skin
from an
onion.
For example, a ribbon of rope lights concealed
in an open soffit that surrounds the entire kitchen can be the
sole
source of
indirect light. Have this single light source on its
own switch. Four
or six small recessed lights in the central part of the
kitchen ceiling
may provide the next layer of light. Additional recessed
lights that wash all of the countertops can be the third
stage of
light. A traditional surface mount fixture in the center
of the room
can provide the final boost of light energy when the
kitchen needs
to be at its brightest.
Ceiling fans in kitchen spaces
are an excellent idea. Not only can they be a functional fixture,
but they also
can
be a highly
decorative item as well. I have a fan in my kitchen
and it is a workhorse. During warmer weather it produces
a gentle
stream
of
cool air that keeps the cook, my wife Kathy, very happy.
I use it every time I mop the floor. The air stream
dries the
floor
before the cats or kids track up the floor.
If you decide
to install a ceiling fan, make sure that you keep recessed fixtures
away from it. If a fan blade
passes
underneath
a light fixture, it can create a very annoying stroboscopic
light effect. I like to keep recessed light fixtures
at least 9 inches
away from the edge of any of the fan blades. If you
can maintain 12 inches clearance, that is even better.
Rope
lighting and small recessed lights are budget friendly. A 20
foot long rope light and eight recessed
lights with
attractive trims can be purchased for about $300.
If anything is going
to break the budget it will be the ceiling fan.
In case you can't
afford the one you want, go ahead and install the
approved ceiling fan electrical box and cable that
will power
it. Place a flush
cover plate over the ceiling box and start saving
your money and
watch for sales or rebate offers.
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