As the seasons shift and daylight hours begin to shorten, the way a home is lit becomes noticeably more important. Spaces that felt warm and comfortable through the long, bright days of summer can suddenly feel dim, flat or uninspiring once autumn sets in. The difference, more often than not, comes down to lighting.
Good home lighting is not simply about brightness. It is about creating the right quality of light for each space and each activity, layering sources thoughtfully and making the most of whatever natural light remains. Here is how to approach it, room by room.
Understand the three types of lighting
Before making any changes, it helps to understand the three categories that professional designers work with. Ambient lighting is the general, overall illumination of a space: ceiling fixtures, recessed downlights and pendant lights fall into this category. Task lighting is focused and functional, directed at specific work surfaces or activity areas such as a desk, kitchen counter or reading chair. Accent lighting is decorative and directional, used to highlight artwork, architectural features or objects of interest.
A well-lit home draws from all three. Many homes rely too heavily on a single overhead source, which creates flat, shadowless light that can feel institutional rather than inviting. Layering in task and accent sources immediately adds depth and warmth.
Make the most of what natural light remains
Natural light is always the most flattering and most energising source, so preserving as much of it as possible through autumn and winter should be the first priority. Keep windows clean to maximise the light that enters, and avoid placing large furniture pieces directly in front of windows where they can obstruct the flow into the room.
For rooms used during the day, sheer curtains or solar shades are a useful alternative to heavier drapes, softening direct sunlight and reducing glare without blocking the view or sacrificing brightness. Where possible, position desks and work surfaces perpendicular to or facing the window rather than with the light source directly behind you, which creates glare on screens and shadows on working surfaces.
Choose warm bulbs for living spaces
The colour temperature of a bulb has an outsized effect on the atmosphere of a room. Bulbs are measured in Kelvin: lower numbers produce warm, amber-toned light, while higher numbers produce cooler, bluer light. For living rooms, bedrooms and dining areas, bulbs in the 2 700 to 3 000 Kelvin range create a warm, relaxed ambience that suits evening use particularly well. Cooler bulbs in the 4 000 to 5 000 Kelvin range are better suited to bathrooms, kitchens and workspaces where clarity and alertness are more important than atmosphere.
Switching to warm-toned LED bulbs in living areas is one of the simplest and most impactful lighting changes you can make as the season changes.
Layer your light sources
A living room lit only by a central ceiling fixture is a common problem. The solution is to introduce multiple light sources at different heights: a floor lamp in a corner, table lamps on side tables, and perhaps a pendant or wall sconce to add visual interest. This creates pools of light throughout the room rather than a single flat wash from above, making the space feel considered and comfortable.
Using dimmer switches where possible allows you to adjust the intensity of ambient lighting to suit the time of day or the mood of an occasion, which is particularly valuable through the darker months when you might want bright light for practical tasks in the afternoon and something softer by evening.
Light your workspace properly
As more South Africans work from home, the quality of lighting in the home office or study has become a practical necessity rather than a luxury. Poor lighting in a workspace causes eye strain, reduces concentration and can affect productivity over the course of a long day.
The most important rule is to keep the primary light source indirect. Overhead lights that shine directly down can create glare on screens and cast shadows across a desk. An upward-facing floor lamp that bounces light off the ceiling, or a desk lamp with a diffusing shade, provides softer, more even illumination that is easier on the eyes over extended periods.
A dedicated task lamp at the desk is also worth investing in. An articulated arm lamp allows you to direct light precisely where it is needed and adjust as tasks change. Position it on the opposite side to your dominant hand to avoid casting shadows across your work. Where a window is present, sitting with it to the side rather than behind you minimises screen glare and makes the most of any available daylight.
Don’t overlook the entrance and hallways
Entrance halls and corridors are often the most neglected spaces in a home when it comes to lighting, yet they set the tone for the whole interior and are typically the first spaces to feel gloomy as the days shorten. A well-lit entrance feels welcoming and makes a home feel larger. Wall sconces, a statement pendant or even a simple lamp on a console table can transform a dark hallway into a space that actually invites you in.
Small, well-placed details make a cumulative difference through the darker months. Night lights in corridors, warm uplighters in corners and candles or lanterns used decoratively all contribute to a home that feels warm and alive rather than dim and contracted against the cold outside.
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