Fixtures · Lighting plan
Lighting replacement plan
Black is the anchor, but warmth is welcome everywhere — distressed finishes, seeded glass, brass/bronze accents, walnut blades. Think black-dominant with warmth, not cool-modern-black. Pure brass-dominant still reads wrong against the cherry floors.
Already there — refinish will lean into the natural red-orange rather than staining darker. The warm anchor everything else builds around.
5 fixtures across 4 bathrooms. All existing are ORB + amber tulip glass — dated finish, wrong light direction in 2 of 4 baths (uplight = bounces off ceiling, bad for mirrors). Replacements should be downlight or sidelight, clear or opal glass (no amber tint), and match the matte black direction for bathrooms. Four style directions below — pick one family or mix per bathroom.
Lily-selected — jr suite (3-light), shared upstairs (4-light), 3/4 downstairs (2-light)
Seeded glass adds warmth/character — pairs with Hinkley Shaw (den) and Clarke (study)
Distressed black reads softer than matte black — friendlier with chrome faucets
No sightlines from living spaces in any of these baths — works on its own
Master deferred — cheap temp bars (×2 Replay, ~$65 each, 2700K) until mirror project resolves, then Barrington there too
Cheap placeholder — ×2 for under $140 total, covers both sinks at move-in
Correct downlight orientation out of the box
2700K bulbs give warm light while mirror project is pending
Purely utilitarian — swap for Barrington when mirror project resolves
| Bathroom | Size | Pick | Est. Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Master — Sink 1 | 2-light | Replay (interim) | ~$65 | Temp until mirror project resolves — Barrington eventual |
| Master — Sink 2 | 2-light | Replay (interim) | ~$65 | Temp until mirror project resolves — Barrington eventual |
| 3/4 downstairs | 2-light | Barrington | verify | No sightlines — Barrington on its own |
| Shared upstairs | 4-light | Barrington | ~$300 | Uplight currently — new fixture fixes orientation |
| Jr suite | 3-light | Barrington | verify | Uplight currently — new fixture fixes orientation |
| Total (5 fixtures) | ~$430+ verify | 2× Replay + 3× Barrington | ||
7 fixtures total across guest bedrooms, jr suite, hall, laundry, and den. All currently ORB + frosted alabaster dome — same dated set throughout. Two-family strategy: one matte-black workhorse for the bedrooms/hall/laundry, one warmer option for the 3rd-floor den. Note: primary bedroom has a ceiling fan (being replaced with the Maverick 70" flush in dark walnut — see §06 below), so no flush mount slot there.
Clean, quietly architectural — reads "designed" not "builder grade"
Twist-lock mounting keeps it truly flush (no gap)
Damp-rated = same fixture works in laundry + jr suite hall
Family quietly ties 4 rooms together without being identical-looking
Not a statement — don't pick this if you want "wow"
Exactly the "cozy/warm/man-cave" direction you called out for the den
Clear glass + edison bulbs = warm pool of light, not flat white
Brass accents echo hardware in powder room (Mitzi Ariana) if you go brass there
2-pack in den = matching set, feels intentional
Bulb-forward — looks best with ST19/ST64 filament bulbs you'll need to buy
Fully exposed bulbs = higher glare than diffused options
2 replacements (foyer + dining) + 1 open (kitchen nook — current fixture is junk, replacement pending use-case). Hero fixtures — highest visual impact and highest risk. Foyer direction has shifted: vertically distributed clusters/cascades, not flat rings or broad multi-arm sprawl. Dark-dominant finish (black / bronze over brass). Warm light source. $3–5k range.
Existing: oversized ORB 12-arm frosted. Direction locked: vertically distributed globe cluster filling the 2-story column — elements at different heights, not a flat plane. 82" wide entry → 27–41" canopy sweet spot (1/3–1/2 of width), cluster occupies 40–80" of vertical air.
39" wide = 48% of the 82" entry — top of Geeps' 1/3–1/2 sweet spot
125" total fill = designed for 2-story columns; owns the vertical
Two-tier arrangement is inherently cascade; 18 globes = real anchor presence
$3,022 — squarely in the $3–5k envelope
Same warm-MCM Skye DNA as the 6-light, scaled to actually match the room
50+ lb fixture — outlet box must be UL-rated or independently supported
125" drop needs the full 2-story column; measure before committing
Lisa McDennon / Hinkley is residential-designer, not handcraft-artisan tier (Hubbardton / Schwung still lead on feel)
Existing: bronze tulip. Tray ceiling is an architectural asset; fixture should anchor it — linear or wide-set looks better than tight round.
Table soft-locked: West Elm Emmerson 72" reclaimed pine. Chandelier width target: 36–48" (1/2 to 2/3 of table length). Brief is "comfy, quietly expensive-feeling" — not formal heritage. Below ordered by fit to that brief.
Hinkley — same brand family as foyer Skye Double XL + Clarke sconces. House brand continuity.
Opal glass + brass + black = three-element finish match to the foyer thread
45"W is textbook scale for the 72" Emmerson (62% of table length, top of 1/2–2/3 rule)
$929 is well-tier-appropriate for the brief, mid-range
6 light count matches Lily's original Wood + Opal Amazon preference
Shades are tapered cone/bell shape, not round globes — different from Reedway's globe DNA
"Spoked wheel" silhouette reads more transitional than the Reedway's sculptural Italian curve
Opal globes + brass + the architectural arch is the closest aesthetic successor to the Reedway's "1940s Italian sculptural" vibe
Leather-wrapped frame is genuine "comfy quietly expensive" tactile detail — ages into character
Arteriors quality tier matches Visual Comfort and Hinkley
42"W is correct for the 72" Emmerson table
$3,250 — over the $2,500 brief ceiling. Justifiable only if Lily falls in love.
Stock photo shows 3 globes, not 6 — verify actual light count before committing (may be a 3-light fixture mis-described elsewhere as 6-light)
Hits the brief on every axis. Linear, 45" wide (correct for 72" table), 6-light, sculptural arch detail, AERIN/Visual Comfort heritage tier
The arch silhouette IS the "1940s Italian sculptural curve" energy of the Reedway, just translated to plaster instead of brass
Conical linen shades = warm diffused light, "comfy expensive" tier
Plaster finish is unique in the house — won't fight any other fixture, ages with character (chips less than worry-tier plaster)
Linen shades, not opal globes — keeps the warm-diffused brief but loses Lily's globe preference
Plaster doesn't carry the brass thread elsewhere in house. The arched frame is the language anchor instead
Price likely $2,499–2,899 — top of the brief ceiling but in range
Linear shape, 48" is the textbook width for the 72" table (1/2 to 2/3 rule)
Tiered linen drum reads "comfy quietly expensive" — same warm fabric brief as the great room Aspen drum, just dining-scale
Rejuvenation in-production, available now
No opal globes — loses the foyer Skye visual thread that Reedway/Tupelo/Stella carry
Pivot from Lily's opal-globe direction to fabric direction; confirm before locking
Closest spirit to the Amazon Wood + Opal piece Lily liked — same MCM-globes-on-stems direction, but proper West Elm build instead of Amazon generic
~$600–700 is right where the Amazon piece tried to be visually, at quality tier
Real opal globes (not opal-inside-cone like Tupelo)
Cluster, not linear — same shape problem as Stella/Paige, under-scaled for a 72" rectangular table
Pure brass (no wood) — drops the wood-frame element that Lily originally liked
West Elm mid-tier build, not heritage like Hudson Valley/Rejuvenation
Exact form factor: wood frame + opal globes + linear over rectangular table
Opal globes echo foyer Skye
~$300 if cost matters more than build tier
Amazon no-name build in a house otherwise full of designer-tier pieces
Wood frame adds another wood tone over the reclaimed-pine Emmerson table — eyeball wood-on-wood in person before committing
Three real heritage-tier linear candidates surfaced from crowdsourced search. My ranking:
Confirmed off-shape or off-character: Tupelo (sharp industrial cones), Troy Juniper (radial cluster not linear), Bryant Large (36"W/4-light, smaller than ideal), Mullan Rome/Ben/Branford/Kilturk (all clusters), Allied Maker Escalante ($23K, too expensive).
Status (May 2026): Amazon Wood + Opal Globes ordered as the interim — buys time and stops the decision nagging. Live with it, then revisit the real pick later: Fontaine for best aesthetic match to brief (if Lily falls for plaster), Saunders for brand-coherent + price-friendly, Harrison for maximum sculptural drama. All three are real, in production, and in budget range.

Linen drum in a semi-flush = the Aspen's warm fabric language hugged to the ceiling, so the great room and nook rhyme without matching
Same VC house as the great room Aspen — quiet brand continuity
ORB + ivory linen reads warm against the cherry floors; glass diffuser kills downward glare
Semi-flush, not pendant — doesn't commit the space to any use
20" may read large if the nook is tight — confirm ceiling clearance + footprint
Price unverified — VC semi-flushes typically $400–700; confirm before ordering
Same linen-drum-semi-flush idea at a fraction of the VC price
Brass accent picks up the foyer/dining brass thread if you want a little warmth
Mid-tier build in a house otherwise full of designer-tier pieces — fine for a low-stakes nook
Verify diameter + finish in person; brass tone varies

Quietest possible answer — true flush, disappears, commits to nothing
Ties to the matte-black thread (bedrooms, laundry, Maverick fans) instead of the linen thread
Does NOT echo the great room Aspen — it's the opposite design language (black workhorse vs warm linen)
Pick this only if you'd rather the nook recede entirely than rhyme with the great room
Single junction box, ~9 ft flat ceiling, no recessed cans in seating zone, no fireplace sconces. Whatever goes here is the primary overhead for the seating zone (dimmable, 24"–28" target width).
Lanes that got dropped: Wood-frame fixtures (wood-on-wood-on-wood with walnut table + jatoba floor), woven rattan (commits the room to coastal/casual that doesn't match the house's refined direction), tall vertical chandelier in Skye family (53"+ minimum drop, fixture would hang into walking space at 9 ft ceiling), small pendants under 18"W (read as kitchen-island scale, not great-room primary).
Candidates grouped by shape, multiple options per shape. Nothing locked.

24" sweet spot for the seating zone, soft diffused light, dims well
Quiet shape lets the walnut coffee table be the room's character moment
Generic drum silhouette, no architectural detail
4–8 week lead time, made-to-order

Faceted downrod and ball detail give it more architectural character than Aspen
Natural paper reads warmer than linen, gentler night glow
Bottom diffuser eliminates downward glare from below
Paper shade is more delicate than linen, harder to clean
Verify exact size variant before ordering

Largest of the drums, real anchor presence over the seating zone
Pleated linen + bronze reads warm/organic, properly designed
$4,999. 6× the Aspen for a fundamentally similar shape, very hard to defend at this scale
Bronze finish is committed, can't pivot later

Smooth dome reads architectural and contemporary, distinctly different from a drum
Black exterior ties to the matte-black thread (Lowell, Maverick fans, sconces)
Gloss white interior bounces a warm pool of light down
Cleanest 24" dome at this price point
Solid dome = downlight only, no upward bounce for ambient
Reads more modern than the rest of the house's transitional direction

Industrial-edge styling, raw + sleek combination, distinctive without being precious
Mixed metal (black + nickel/brass) ties to multiple house finishes simultaneously
Cheapest of the dome options, leaves budget for the rug
15.6"W is undersized for the seating zone, would need to be hung lower or accept "smaller fixture" reading
Industrial styling may fight the room's softer organic direction (walnut + linen + warm whites)

22" hits the size target, dome shape with white glass + bottom diffuser = soft even light
Aged brass + soft white reads warmer than the matte-black Powell Street, more residential than industrial
3-light internal = better light output for a primary fixture, dimmable
$1,326 is a bigger commitment than Powell Street or Wellfleet
Aged brass commits to the brass thread (away from black-dominant house language)

Genuinely different shape: organic, neither drum nor globe nor dome
American-made, hand-forged, ages into character not out of style
No fabric/paper/glass to age, durable
Sculptural form competes with the walnut sculptural coffee table for the room's character moment
Stronger aesthetic commitment than drum/dome, harder to "swap out" later

Truly different shape, textured ceramic ruffle, sculptural without being heavy
24"W hits the size target, semi-flush option works if you want it lower-profile
Cheapest of the sculptural options at $458
Reads coastal / Megan Molten, the doc explicitly ruled out coastal direction earlier — this would re-open that question
Ceramic chips if knocked, less durable than metal
Single pendants in the cased-opal-glass + heritage-brass family, ties hardest to the foyer Skye and Clarke sconces. Both options below are smaller than ideal for the room (industry doesn't make this shape at 22"+ because hand-blown glass gets fragile at scale). Including for completeness if the language coherence beats the size compromise.

Etched opal + Heritage Brass + Black ties directly to foyer Skye and Clarke sconces, strongest house-language coherence
Tapered teardrop silhouette has architectural character without being a "showpiece"
$609 is mid-range
9"W is small for the great room seating zone, will read modest
Single pendant at this scale better suited to a kitchen island or smaller alcove

Same family as Oliver, slightly larger body and more presence
Cased opal + brass + black again ties cleanly to foyer Skye + Clarke
15"W is still on the smaller side for the seating zone
Long-chain construction (53"+ total drop) can intrude at 9 ft ceiling unless chain is shortened

Pulls the Lowell drum thread (bedrooms, laundry, study) into the great room, secondary-fixture coherence
Cheapest by far, frees budget for rug + sofa
Drum hides any box-vs-fireplace centering offset
Reads as utility not anchor, room loses its "fixture moment"
17" undersized for room scale
4 fixtures, all currently ORB uplight tulip. Two-family strategy: decorative larger sconce flanking the open study / office fireplace (high visibility, style statement), and a simpler compact sconce for the upstairs hallway (ambient/functional). Stairway is recessed-only — no sconce there. Matching the two families by brand keeps it coordinated without being identical.
Proper scale for fireplace flanking — 16" tall feels intentional, not "pathetic"
Black shade + brass frame = formal without being stuffy. Pairs well with a fireplace study aesthetic
Pull chain means it works without an on-wall switch — useful if box isn't switched
Ties to the brass/black direction across the house (powder, den, potentially chandeliers)
Traditional silhouette — won't work if you want the open study / office to read ultra-modern
Pair = ~$400, and that's just 2 of 5 sconces
Black-dominant with small gold accent matches the agreed finish direction
More decorative than a basic compact downlight, makes the upstairs hall a small moment instead of pure utility
Black/gold language ties to Clarke (open study/office) and the brass-and-black thread elsewhere
Not a Hinkley, so technically breaks "one brand family across all sconces" coordination
BBB sourcing, availability/return less reliable than Hinkley via Amazon, verify stock
Same Hinkley family as Clarke if brand coordination matters more than decoration
LED built in, no bulbs to buy or replace
Reliable Amazon sourcing if BBB stock is a problem
Genuinely just functional, the hall becomes utility instead of a moment
Dramatic alternative for open study / office — swing arm reads "library/study" vibe you mentioned
Plug-in means no electrician needed if existing box is in the wrong place
Adjustable reach = can aim down at a reading chair or up to wash the wall
Plug-in cord has to be dealt with — either drop through wall (rated for it) or hide along baseboard
Reads more industrial/modern than Clarke — opposite style direction
1 fixture. Existing: brown-blade + frosted bowl kit on a vaulted ceiling with a flat ridge at the peak. Function-dominant room: air movement is the job, the look matters second. Primary bedroom is getting the same Maverick in walnut-blade finish, see §06.
60" span fits the 38" flat ridge with comfortable blade clearance over the slopes
DC motor: quiet at low speed, ~70% less energy than AC
Balsa blades (curved, not flat), sculpture when off, effective when on
Integrated dimmable LED handles the whole room, no separate light kit needed
Same family as the master bedroom (§06) at a different size and finish, consistent design language
Integrated LED = whole fan replacement when LED dies (~50k hours = 15+ years, but still)
Existing fan being replaced with the same Monte Carlo Maverick family used in the den (§05), in the 70" flush mount, Matte Black + Dark Walnut Blades finish (SKU 3MAVR70RZWD) to echo the Thuma Classic Queen Walnut bed frame. Trayed ceiling (~9–10 ft), centered in room over carpet (not directly over the bed). SW Alabaster walls; the dark walnut blades carry the bed's warm medium-brown tone up to the ceiling. Flush mount (not downrod) is correct for the tray. Pendant direction explored and discarded.
Dark walnut blades match Thuma Classic Walnut bed tone exactly — warm medium-brown wood family, top to bottom
Flush mount is the right call for a trayed ceiling — sits tight without a downrod hanging into the tray well
70" span moves real air for the room without needing a higher RPM
Same Maverick family as den (§05), different size + blade finish, consistent design language
DC motor = quiet at low speed (bedroom-appropriate); integrated dimmable LED handles whole-room light
Pairs with Lutron Caséta fan switch for control
The great room has 2 switched outlets on the window wall. Per the magicplan layout (sofa floats in middle facing fireplace), those outlets are functionally orphaned — cords from the window wall to a center-floating lamp would cross open floor (tripping hazard). So the floor-lamp-from-switched-outlet plan doesn't actually work for this layout. The Varville candidate below was scoped before this was understood and needs re-examining: an arc lamp wants to live somewhere it can reach the seating zone without crossing traffic. Office still wants a tall reading lamp, that one is unaffected.
Black frame ties to the foyer Skye / sconce thread
Arc form is genuinely useful when the base can sit beside a sofa and the arch reaches over the seating
Layout problem: sofa floats in the middle of the room facing the fireplace. The switched outlets are on the window wall (perpendicular to the sofa). For the arc to reach the seating zone, the base would have to sit on the floor near the sofa, but the cord would then cross open floor back to the wall — exactly the tripping hazard that makes the switched outlets orphaned
If the base sits against the window wall to reach the switched outlet, the 77" arch can't extend far enough to actually drop light over the floating sofa
Single fixed shade, less adjustable than the 3-light Ebern below
3 lights + dimmable + adjustable temp = real working light for the office (not just decorative)
Remote control means you don't have to walk over to dim/switch
Lily-selected — already vetted for the room
Modern arc reads more "showroom" than "library" — depends on office direction
80" tall — confirm ceiling height in the office corner
Current mirrors are undersized for the continuous double vanity — too much dead wall on both sides — and the ORB sconce-over-mirror layout puts light on the ceiling, not on faces. This is a mirrors + possible sconce-repositioning project, deferred until after the vanity bar swap so you can see the room first. Hard constraint: anti-fog is non-negotiable (shaving after showering). That rules out a simple mirror swap — defog either comes integrated or via a retrofit pad wired to the vanity circuit.
Two framed LED mirrors, one per sink — properly sized (~28–30" wide × 36" tall each), built-in defog and dimming. One long spanning mirror ruled out — room is traditionally detailed (beadboard, tile border, mosaic accents, cherry-adjacent tones) and a frameless edge-lit slab would read out of place. Two mirrors keeps the two-station layout and fits the room better. Frame style and finish TBD with Lily — black frame matches the new vanity bars; warm brass also on the table. Framed vs. thin-frame vs. arched: bring examples to Lily before deciding.
20 fixtures to replace + 1 removal. All existing are ORB or brown-finish builder grade.
| # | Location | Existing | Call | Section | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chandeliers / Pendants | |||||
| 1 | Foyer (2-story) | ORB 12-arm frosted chandelier | LOCKED — Hinkley Skye Double XL 18-Light | §03 | Locked |
| 2 | Dining room (tray ceiling) | Bronze tulip chandelier | Working — Wood + Opal Globes 6-Light or black iron globe cluster | §03 | Replace |
| 3 | Kitchen nook | Bronze bowl pendant (junk) | Flush or semi-flush — direction pending use-case | §03 | Open |
| Flush Mounts | |||||
| 4 | Jr suite — hall | ORB + alabaster dome (small) | Replace | §02 | Replace |
| 5 | Jr suite — bedroom | ORB + alabaster dome (small) | Replace | §02 | Replace |
| 6 | Den — ceiling (×2) | ORB + alabaster dome (small) | Replace | §02 | Replace |
| 7 | Laundry room | ORB + alabaster dome (large) | Replace | §02 | Replace |
| 8 | Bedroom 1 | ORB + alabaster pointed/finial | Replace | §02 | Replace |
| 9 | Bedroom 2 | ORB + alabaster pointed/finial | Replace | §02 | Replace |
| 10 | Study / open study / office | ORB scrollwork + alabaster bowl (semi-flush) | Replace | §04 | Replace |
| Ceiling Fans | |||||
| 11 | 3rd floor den (vaulted) | Brown blades + frosted bowl | Replace — sloped ceiling | §05 | Replace |
| — | Primary bedroom | Ceiling fan (existing) | Replace with Maverick 70" flush, dark walnut (§06) | §06 | Locked |
| Sconces | |||||
| 12 | Open study / office — fireplace left | ORB uplight tulip | Replace | §04 | Replace |
| 13 | Open study / office — fireplace right | ORB uplight tulip | Replace | §04 | Replace |
| 14 | 2nd floor hall — left | ORB uplight tulip | Replace | §04 | Replace |
| 15 | 2nd floor hall — right | ORB uplight tulip | Replace | §04 | Replace |
| Bathroom Mirrors | |||||
| — | Master — mirror ×2 | Builder undersized frameless | Framed LED mirrors w/ built-in defog — size up, decide with Lily. Master vanity bar swap held pending this. | §07 | Deferred |
| Bathroom Vanity Bars | |||||
| 17 | Master — sink 1 | 2-bulb downlight tulip | Replace (aesthetic only) | §01 | Deciding |
| 18 | Master — sink 2 | 2-bulb downlight tulip | Replace (aesthetic only) | §01 | Deciding |
| 19 | First floor (powder) | 2-bulb downlight tulip | Replace (aesthetic only) | §01 | Deciding |
| 20 | Shared upstairs bath | 4-bulb uplight tulip | Replace (fix uplight) | §01 | Deciding |
| 21 | Jr suite bath | 3-bulb uplight tulip | Replace (fix uplight) | §01 | Deciding |