A feature wall is doing more than holding paint or panelling. It anchors the room, draws the eye, and often hosts the television, fireplace, or a favourite piece of art. Lighting that wall well lifts the whole scheme. Wall lights, in particular, bring depth, soften the corners, and give a feature wall the attention it deserves without turning the room into a showroom.
This guide explains how to choose, position, and style wall lights so they enhance the feature wall rather than fight with it.
Before choosing fittings, define the role of the feature wall. Is it a backdrop for a media unit, a textured panel behind the sofa, or a gallery of framed prints? Each scenario calls for different lighting. A panelled wall benefits from uplighters that graze across the surface and pick out the texture. A gallery wall needs gentle, even light that flatters the frames. A media wall wants softer wash light, since strong directional fittings will glare on the screen.
Wall lights should sit comfortably with your existing furniture and finishes. A polished brass sconce works beautifully in a calm scheme with warm timbers and soft fabrics. Matt black fittings feel sharper and suit minimalist living rooms. Glass and crystal shades catch the light in classic schemes. If your living room furniture already has a defined finish, echo it in the wall light frame rather than introducing a fourth metal tone.
Wall light direction shapes the room as much as the bulb. Uplighters wash the ceiling and exaggerate height, which suits homes with tall walls or panelled features. Downlighters throw a focused pool, useful above a console or low piece of art. Up and down fittings split the beam in both directions and create dramatic columns of light on the wall. Decide which effect suits your feature before you fall in love with a fitting.
Pairs and trios of wall lights almost always look better than a single fitting on a wide feature wall. As a guide, place lights so the centre of each fitting sits roughly 1.5m to 1.7m from the floor in a standing area, slightly lower above seating. Space them evenly along the wall, with at least 60cm to 80cm between fittings on a typical UK living room wall. Browse our range of wall lights to compare scales and proportions in one place.
Wall lights live or die by the bulb. A warm white between 2700K and 3000K is restful in living rooms. Dimmable bulbs let you take the wall from bright on a wintry afternoon down to a glow in the evening. Look for fittings that take widely available E14 or E27 bulbs, since this keeps replacements easy and lets you switch later if your needs change.
If your feature wall holds a piece of art, position wall lights so the beam catches the frame rather than glaring on the glass. Picture lights work well here. If the wall holds a television, avoid placing wall lights directly above the screen, since reflections will spoil the picture. Side fittings further from the screen work better, with a soft floor lamp nearby to balance the brightness of the screen.
Wall lights need wiring, so it is worth planning early. Sockets behind a media unit, dedicated wall switches by the door, or smart bulbs controlled from your phone all give different levels of flexibility. If you are not in a position to rewire, plug in wall lights with neat cord covers can give a similar effect with less commitment.
A feature wall rarely works in isolation. Pair wall lights with a ceiling pendant, table lamps, and a floor lamp to give the room enough flexibility for everyday use. The wall lights then become the accent, picking out the feature when you want to show it off. For art lovers, combining wall lights with wall art turns the feature wall into something you genuinely notice every time you enter the room. At Furniture in Fashion, you can browse modern furniture UK and pair lighting with living room pieces in one place, with free UK delivery.
A standard guide is roughly 1.5m to 1.7m from the floor for standing areas, slightly lower above seating. Adjust to suit ceiling height and the scale of the wall.
They should coordinate rather than match exactly. The same finish or family of materials is usually enough to tie the scheme together.
Uplighters exaggerate height and suit panelled walls. Downlighters spotlight art or consoles. Up and down fittings split the difference for a dramatic effect.
In smaller living rooms, several wall lights can give enough ambient light on their own. In most rooms, they work alongside a ceiling fitting rather than replacing it.
Few features bring as much warmth to a British home as a parquet or original…
A playroom is a wonderful thing to have, but family life moves quickly and the…
The snug is one of the most comforting rooms in a British home, smaller and…
A dedicated reading room is a gentle luxury that more British homeowners are choosing to…
Exposed brick has become one of the most admired features in British homes, appearing in…
Trends move quickly, and a room decorated entirely around the moment can feel dated within…
This website uses cookies.