Working from home is no longer a temporary arrangement for most British households. The home office has become a permanent room, often carved out of a spare bedroom, a corner of the living room or a converted loft. In each of these spaces the same problem appears. Overhead lighting alone rarely flatters a desk, and a small task lamp can leave the rest of the room in shadow. An adjustable floor lamp solves both issues at once.
At Furniture in Fashion we hear this from customers regularly. They want a fitting that supports long working days, suits a tidy aesthetic and does not dominate a small room. The guide below sets out what to look for and how to make the right choice for your space.
Adjustable means more than a slight tilt at the head. The most useful office lamps offer movement at three or four points. A swivel base, a hinged shoulder, a pivot at the elbow and a directional shade. With this level of articulation you can light a screen, a notebook or a video call background without relocating the fitting.
Counterbalanced arms, often associated with classic architect style designs, are particularly useful at a desk because they hold their position without drifting. Spring loaded arms tend to be more affordable but can sag over time. If you plan to move the head several times a day, the counterbalanced version is worth the small extra investment.
The lamp should reach across the desk without towering over it. As a rough guide, the shade at full extension should sit between 35cm and 50cm above the work surface, throwing light onto the keyboard rather than into your eyes. If your office uses one of our computer desks, measure from the desk top rather than the floor when choosing.
Corner desks and L shaped layouts benefit from a floor lamp positioned at the inside corner, where it can swing across either side of the workstation. Our corner computer desks suit this arrangement particularly well in smaller rooms.
Office tasks usually call for a slightly cooler white than living room lighting. A bulb between 3500K and 4000K supports concentration without feeling clinical. Look for around 600 to 800 lumens at the head, and a high colour rendering index so colours on screen and on paper match the eye.
Dimmable bulbs are especially welcome in dual purpose rooms. A bright daytime setting for spreadsheets can soften into a warmer glow for evening reading, which means the same lamp serves the room well after the working day ends.
Home offices tend to suit a quieter palette than living rooms. Matt black and brushed steel are the easiest finishes to live with because they recede against most wall colours and pair with both timber and laminate desks. Brass or aged bronze can introduce warmth in a panelled study or a room with darker furniture.
If your office sits within a living room, choose a lamp that reads as a piece of furniture rather than a piece of equipment. A slender arch or a softly curved arm will look at home next to a fabric chair or one of our lounge chaise chairs, which often double as a reading seat in a hybrid space.
An adjustable floor lamp is only as useful as it is stable. Look for a weighted base, ideally cast metal, that resists tipping when the arm is fully extended. Check the cable length too. Short flex on a tall lamp leads to awkward extension leads, which clutter the room and create trip hazards near a desk.
Some lamps now include integrated USB ports or a small base tray for headphones. These touches can be useful but should not be the deciding factor. The quality of the light and the stability of the build matter far more than gadget features.
Position the lamp on the opposite side to your writing hand to avoid casting your own shadow across the page. For screen work, angle the head so the shade aims slightly behind the monitor rather than directly at it, which reduces glare. Combine the floor lamp with a soft ambient source elsewhere in the room, such as a small table lamp on a shelf, so the contrast between bright desk and dark surroundings does not strain the eyes.
If your office shares space with the rest of the home, our broader office furniture range can help you build a setup where lighting, desk and storage work as a quiet, considered whole.
Aim for the shade to sit between 35cm and 50cm above the desk surface at working extension.
Yes. LED bulbs run cool, last well and are now available in a full range of colour temperatures and dimmable options.
Between 3500K and 4000K supports focus while still feeling comfortable in a domestic room.
A floor lamp is better when your desk is small or shared, since it lights the work surface without crowding it.
Position the shade to one side of the monitor rather than directly behind it and use a dimmable bulb so brightness can be matched to the screen.
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