
The atmosphere of this bedroom is defined with lighting, and can be adjusted according to your mood by razing or lowering
light levels. Not only does the lighting highlights architectural features, it defines and separates specific areas of the
room. Indirect up-light inside a tray ceiling pull the eye upward to reveal full extend of the room's space. A splash of light
thrown upward accents a dramatic ceiling design. In this bedroom artificial and natural
light combine to accentuate the shape and volume of the space.
While general lighting in the room is provided by recessed lighting furnish abundant light. Built-in down-lighters concealed
as task lighting over the bed and vanity area.
Awash with light from the sconces the walls come alive with the dramatic interplay
of light and dark. As with any built-in lighting, it pays to pre-wire sconces during construction, even if you don't install
them right away. Hide wiring behind the wall: add boxes and install lighting fixtures later.

The basic canister-shaped recessed lighting fixture, often called a "can light", is the same for both down lights and eyeball
lights. The cylindrical can channels all the light downward, but you can dramatically alter the pattern the light throws in two ways:
by choosing a different trim to aim, reflect, or diffuse light, or by replacing the light bulb inside with one of a different shape
or color. Some trims for built-in ceiling lights have a glass diffuser that hides the bulb, other allow the bulb to remain visible.
"Eyeball" fixtures designed to aim the light directly on the painting or sculpture, and swivel to the exact position desired.
A type of built-in lighting called a "wall washer" blocks a portion of the light to throw a shadow, a dramatic technique that is
especially effective if you wish to accent the texture of a stone or brick wall. Recessed lights whose trim is flushed with the ceiling
provide more overall lighting than those with an eyeball or wall-washer trim. Most of this fixtures require light bulbs of no more than 75
watts, but you can use a spotlight, a mini-spot, a regular incandescent, or a halogen bulb. Try a silver- or gold-color trim for maximum light,
or a black baffle trim for subdued mood lighting.
A basic built-in recessed fixture with standard reflector trim throws light downward in a cone shape, producing a circle of light at
the bottom s wide as the room is high. In the room with 8-foot ceilings, place the fixture in a grid from 6 to 8 feet apart (and
never closer than 4) so the light slightly overlaps. In a room with 10-foot ceilings, place the lights about 7 to 10 feet apart.
If you use a diffuser on a recessed light, you need a bulb with twice as much wattage to provide the same light as a bare bulb,
but the light will appear softer.