Wall lights can be some of the most diverse design elements in an interior decorator’s tool-kit. Lighting could make or break a setting, demonstrating strengths or obscuring flaws. Wall lighting is an essential part of the whole makeup of a room or studio or house, depending on the boundaries of the professional decorator’s commission. As an example, recessed lighting, where the light fixture is concealed in the wall, ceiling, or perhaps floor, has become quite fashionable for making layered effects, particularly when used with dimmers.
Indeed, one main factor in contemporary lighting design is energy efficiency, which is often related to user-defined control. Wall lights are ideal, particularly when they are a part of a track lighting system. Whether for ambient lighting, task lighting, or accent lighting, wall lights are now very common in homes, offices, and even industrial settings.
It might not seem obvious at first how wall lights may be employed as the uplights and downlights typical of most ambient lighting schemes, but it is possible, though rather harder to do so. When recessed and pointed at an angle, an otherwise common wall light may serve as the functional equivalent of the standard up- or downlight.
Applications for which wall lights are more ideal include kitchen lighting, bathroom lighting, and in particular hallway lighting, typically in the shape of wall sconces. Corridors are reasonably easy, but kitchens and bathrooms will present extra challenges that require a certain amount of practicality on the part of interior designers.
That is because the air in a kitchen will probably be greasy, with particles that settle onto light fixtures and into the crevices of any that are recessed, while toilets are typically quite damp and have extra safety priorities that should be kept in mind, for example special fittings, that are designed for toilet use.