Furniture in Fashion Blog
Furniture in Fashion Blog
Furniture in Fashion Blog
The Kitchen as the Hardest Working Room
Few rooms ask as much from lighting as a kitchen. Early morning breakfasts, late evening cooking, homework on the island, weekend brunch with friends. Each of these moments needs a different quality of light. The era of one bright pendant in the centre of the ceiling has long passed, and modern UK kitchens now use several fittings that work together. We have spent years at Furniture in Fashion helping people pull these layers into a clear scheme that suits how they actually cook.
Begin with Task Light Over the Worktop
Worktop lighting is the most important layer. Without it, you chop and prepare in your own shadow. Linear LED bars under wall units throw bright, directional light onto the worktop and remove the need to lean toward the window. Recessed downlights set in line with the front edge of the wall units do a similar job for kitchens with no upper cabinetry.
Our spotlights collection includes adjustable styles that suit tracked installations, where light heads can be angled toward a hob, sink or breakfast bar.
Pendants Over an Island or Peninsula
An island is the focal point of an open plan kitchen, and its lighting should reflect that. Two or three pendants in a line look settled and balanced. Aim for a bottom edge around 75cm to 90cm above the worktop. Glass and metal shades suit a streamlined look, while ribbed or fluted shades soften the feel.
If your island doubles as a dining bar, browse our wider ceiling and chandelier lights range for cluster designs that gather more light over a single seating zone. Pair them with our bar stool furniture selection to complete the layout in one coordinated scheme.
Ambient Light for Open Plan Kitchens
Many modern UK kitchens flow into a dining and living zone. Without ambient lighting in the wider room, the kitchen feels brighter than its surroundings and the boundary becomes obvious after dark. Soft ceiling fittings or a row of low output downlights in the open zone keep the brightness balanced.
Our broader lighting collection covers fittings that match across both kitchen and living spaces, which keeps an open plan layout reading as one room.
Choosing the Right Bulb Temperature
Kitchens benefit from a slightly cooler tone than a sitting room. 3500K to 4000K gives a clean, neutral light that helps colours read accurately, which matters when you are checking whether food is properly cooked. Avoid going too cool. Anything above 5000K starts to feel sterile, especially in evenings.
Dimmable circuits make a real difference here. A bright cooking setting drops to a softer dining glow with no extra fittings.
Plinths, Glass Cabinets and Display Lighting
Smaller accent lights add character. LED strips fitted under the plinth give a gentle floor glow at night, useful for late kitchen visits. Internal cabinet lighting brings glass display units to life in the evening, so the kitchen still feels alive when the worktop lights are dimmed.
Practical Notes for British Kitchens
Steam, splashes and grease all affect lighting choices. Look for fittings rated IP44 or higher above the sink and hob. Glass shades wipe clean more easily than fabric shades. Avoid placing pendants too close to the hob extractor, as the airflow gathers cooking residue on the shade and affects the look over time.
If your kitchen sits at the back of a terrace or in a single storey extension, a roof lantern with a pendant cluster beneath gives the most flexible result. Daylight floods in by day and the cluster takes over after dusk.
FAQs
How many pendants should I hang over a kitchen island? A 1.8 metre island suits two pendants. A 2.4 metre island looks balanced with three. Always centre them along the worktop length.
Are LED strips under wall units worth it? Yes. Worktop strips are the single most useful upgrade in most British kitchens, since they remove the daily problem of working in your own shadow.
What colour temperature suits a UK kitchen best? 3500K to 4000K. It balances accurate colour with a comfortable feel for both daytime cooking and evening use.
Can I mix pendant styles in one kitchen? Yes, but stick to a shared finish or shape language. Mixing brass and matt black across pendants and downlights works when each finish is repeated more than once in the room.

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