Recessed
Lighting Design
By Tim Carter, Askthebuilder.com
Summary: Recessed lighting allows you to design with imagination!
These lighting fixtures come in several shapes and finishes and
can be used in a number of imaginative ways. Recessed lights can
add drama or accent, pizazz and sparkle. These recessed lighting
design tips will illuminate your creativity.
Wide Selection/Uses
What happens if you want to add recessed light in a finished
ceiling? No problem! They make special housings that will slide
in a hole
you cut. What about low voltage recessed lights? They have those
as well. What about sloped ceilings? Ever been in a room and
have those lights aiming at your eyes? Well, that is not a problem
anymore.
You can purchase special housing that aims the bulb directly
to the floor!
Want a super energy efficient recessed light
that doesn't leak air? You can get those as well. A regular recessed
light that
is covered with insulation can leak up to 2.6 million cubic
feet
of
air per year! That can equate to nearly 1 million BTU's of
energy loss. Check out the air tight fixtures.
Recessed Light Suggested
Uses and Installation Tips
I have used recessed lighting in just about every imaginable
place you can think of in a residential house. My customers
and myself
have come up with some very imaginative uses. Many of them
you might be familiar with.
Exterior Uses
Any covered porch is an excellent candidate for recessed
lighting. It doesn't matter if the style of the house is
contemporary
or traditional. Of course, contemporary styling makes the
choice a natural. But let's say you are building a period
Victorian
house.
How would recessed lighting look? Well, consider using
it on a covered front porch to wash the front porch walls with
light
to
highlight the front door or ornate paint detailing for
people
who pass by your house when it is dark. Just like you might
use
landscape
lighting to light trees to show them off, use recessed
lights to wash your house with light.
Place recessed lights
in soffits, cantilevered floors, etc. to illuminate or highlight
features of your house.
You will
be surprised
how striking the effect really is!
Interior Uses
I really like using recessed lighting in conjunction with
other forms of light in rooms. I have already told you
about my kitchen.
Think of using recessed lighting in a study or den to
create general mood lighting around the perimeter of the ceiling.
If you plan
your furniture layout and choices, you can place lights
centered on these items to illuminate them fully. By
using
soft, low
wattage bulbs you create a very soft low lighting mood.
High intensity
lights can be used at workstations or reading chairs.
Modernistic dining rooms offer a great place
for recessed lighting. You can tray (layer) a ceiling and include
recessed lights
in the lower tray. The center of the ceiling can contain
a chandelier
as well. The recessed lights can be strategically placed
to highlight furniture, paintings or decorative items.
They can
be turned
on
independently of the chandelier to create a glow in
the
room. Dimmer controls work great for this effect.
Recessed
lights work great above tubs, showers, whirlpools, etc. I always
installed recessed lights over the mirrors
in my customers
bathrooms. They could control these lights from a
different switch that controlled the wall mounted decorative
fixtures above or
along side the mirrors.
Recessed lighting is often the safest choice for
the interior of closets. Many house fires have been
caused
by objects
(falling from shelves) coming into contact with unshielded
bulbs from
surface
mounted fixtures.
Installation Tips
Have you ever installed a recessed light? If so you
probably did it this way: open box, determine location,
nail up
fixture, begin
wiring process, take muscle relaxant for strained
neck muscles!
My electrician taught me the trick
to avoid the muscle relaxants! It's simple. All you need to
do is wire
the fixture on the
ground or floor level before you nail it in place.
No more strained
neck muscles. No more dropped wire nuts. You
will be surprised how much
easier this is.
If you are a DIY'r, please take the time to read
the specific installation guidelines. If you
didn't get
any with the
light, call the company
and ask for some! If wired improperly, recessed
lights can be hazardous. Do not underestimate
the amount
of heat a 150
watt
bulb can produce!
Above all, please get your
job inspected by a certified electrical inspector. People die
every day in this
country from electrical-related
house fires. Don't you be one of them.
|