Pamela Zaid

Articles and Advice

How to Choose Lighting That Makes Rooms Feel Larger

The right lighting can do more for a room than almost any other design decision. Paint colors, furniture arrangement, and clever storage all play a role in how spacious a space feels — but lighting is often the element that ties everything together. Understanding a few key principles can help you transform rooms that feel cramped into ones that feel open and airy.

Start With Natural Light

Before adding any fixtures, maximize what you already have. Keeping window treatments light and minimal allows natural light to reach deeper into a room, which instantly makes it feel more expansive. Sheer curtains hung close to the ceiling and extending slightly beyond the window frame create the illusion of larger windows and, by extension, a larger room.

Mirrors placed opposite or adjacent to windows amplify that effect. Natural light bouncing around a room softens shadows and reduces visual contrast, helping the space feel less boxed in.

Layer Your Lighting

Relying on a single overhead fixture is one of the most common mistakes in smaller rooms. A single light source creates harsh shadows that emphasize the edges and corners of a space. Layering multiple light sources at different heights eliminates those pockets of darkness and gives the room a sense of depth.

Consider combining:

  • Ambient lighting for overall illumination
  • Task lighting for specific functional areas
  • Accent lighting to draw the eye toward architectural features or artwork

Each layer adds dimension, helping a room feel larger than one with flat, even lighting.

Go Vertical With Fixtures

Wall sconces and floor lamps that cast light upward draw the eye toward the ceiling, making the room feel taller. Uplighting floor lamps work especially well in rooms with low ceilings, as they redirect attention upward rather than emphasizing the horizontal plane.

Recessed lighting is another strong option. By eliminating bulky fixtures that hang down into the room, you keep the visual field clean and open. If recessed lighting isn't an option, flush-mount or semi-flush fixtures achieve a similar effect.

Choose the Right Bulb Temperature

Warm white bulbs (around 2700K–3000K) create a cozy atmosphere but can make spaces feel smaller. Cool white or daylight bulbs (3500K–5000K) tend to make rooms feel more open and clean. For rooms where you want to maximize the sense of space, leaning toward the cooler end of the spectrum is worth considering.

Dimmable bulbs give you flexibility to shift between moods, which can be useful in rooms that serve multiple purposes throughout the day.

Use Light to Define, Not Divide

In open-concept spaces, lighting can be used to define areas without adding walls or partitions. A pendant light over a dining area (if ceiling height allows) or a focused lamp grouping in a reading nook creates a sense of purpose for each zone while keeping the overall flow of the space intact.

Strategic lighting placement guides the eye through a room rather than stopping it — and that sense of movement is a powerful tool for making any space feel more generous than it actually is.

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