Showing posts with label chandelier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chandelier. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Let there be light in the breakfast nook

























I wrote previously about the light fixture in our breakfast nook, originally I wrote about how it was not really our taste and so I was planning to update it rather than replace it. Then I wrote about how when I got a better look at the light fixture that I discovered that it was not in good enough shape to continue to be used, that the plastic outer casing around each of the light bulbs was somewhat burned. This of course was especially concerning since the bulbs that had been in the light fixture exceeded the maximum allowable wattage for the fixture so we weren't sure if the fixture might even have some actual damage due to being overloaded.


Well when I pulled down the old fixture I discovered that the wires were mildly damaged so I had to cut the wires back and strip them in order to hang the new fixture we had purchased, of course if you try this at home please remember to turn off the circuit that corresponds to the outlet where you will be working. Once the wires were cut and stripped it was time to hang our new light fixture. This is much easier than many people think it is, all you really have to do is connect the live or hot wires to each other and fasten them with a wire nut and then connect the neutral wires to each other and fasten them with a wire nut (the black wire should be the live wire and the white wire should be the neutral wire). Honestly the most difficult part of the whole thing was cutting and stripping the wires, well unless you want to count drilling the hole for the hook to swag the chain off of so the light hangs in the center of our table. Of course that was only so difficult because I didn't have the right drill bit for the job so I had to make it wide enough with the bit I had. And of course once we got the light fixture up we put a nice little CFL bulb in the fixture. I love CFLs because they don't get nearly as hot as the incandescent bulbs do, just remember what the old fixture looked like after it had too strong of incandescent bulbs in it.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Light for the breakfast nook

Now that we are in the house and I am able to really get to know the house and what our specific needs are for this house and the various areas of the house I can start considering what to purchase for the house. One of the big surprises that I stumbled upon was a problem in my hopes to reuse the chandelier in the breakfast nook. The plastic part of the light fixture near the light bulbs is somewhat melted, it could be from using light bulbs with too high of a wattage for the fixture or since the inside of the shades are reflective it is possible that even using the maximum wattage allowable in the fixture was too much for the plastic parts close to the light bulb to handle. Either way I am left looking for a new light fixture for the area now. Not a big deal since the chandelier in there was not really our taste so I was going to have to do something to change the look of the chandelier anyhow so that it would be more inline with our tastes.






















I found one that I really like at the Pottery Barn, the Porter Pendant. The only issue I have with the fixture is that I can't really drape the cord to make it hang off center in the space. I want to do this because I plan to put the table up against the window and if I don't put the fixture off center towards the window then we will continue to bump our heads on it as we have been doing with the current light fixture. For now I had to move the table so that it is under the current light fixture so that we won't continue to bump our heads on the light fixture. It will be nice to finally get a light fixture in there that suits our tastes and that we won't continually bump our heads on.

This morning I stumbled upon a similar light fixture with a chain at Ikea, the Kroby Pendant Lamp. Of course this lamp doesn't have the same cool factor as the one at the Pottery Barn which raises and lowers on a pulley system and is modeled after the antique lamps that once lit workshops in Paris and it also doesn't allow for as bright of a light bulb (60 watt max vs. 100 watt max with the larger Pottery Barn light), but since I will save over $100 on this light and it will be able to be hung off center easily so that it hangs in the center of the table preventing people from bumping their heads on it and of course our house is pretty bright even without lights on so I am pretty confident that this light will prove to be a good choice for us.

Saturday, August 1, 2009

Breakfast Nook Chandelier


Here is a picture of the breakfast nook as it is currently (with the current owners belongings). The chandelier is not really our thing so I had been looking at ideas for what to replace it with or how to make it a little less country when I stumbled across this idea when I was going through the old Daily Danny blog archives.


Here, a metal drum shade is placed over the chandelier. It's punched with holes to let the light shine through. If you have a boring chandelier, you could buy a very sheer drum shade and place it on top to dress it up. Or you can find a vintage shade (with lots of metal ribs around it) and remove the fabric...just exposing the lines to give the illusion of a shade.

I am thinking a fairly sheer white shade of some sort might do the trick, of course I can't go too sheer or my CFL chandelier bulbs will look out of place in the fixture. I am also wondering if I will need to paint the chandelier some other color to make it all work well together. Hopefully finding a drum shade big enough to encase the current fixture won't prove too difficult. I guess only time will tell. We don't move in for nearly 2 months so it will be a while before I can get to all these little projects.