Choose the Color Temperature
Step 3 · Keep colors consistent by area
Color temperature determines the feel of a room — warm and relaxing, or crisp and energizing. Keep one Kelvin per area for a clean, intentional look.
1. Choose the vibe. Warm, neutral, or cool?
2. Apply that Kelvin to the entire area. Mixing temperatures makes spaces feel disjointed.
3. Adjust per fixture if needed. You can fine-tune individual lights later.
Kelvin Options and Where They Work Best
Soft amber, similar to candlelight.
- Fireplace areas
- Cozy living rooms
- Restaurants / lounge lighting
- Use intentionally — this is mood lighting, not task lighting.
- Great for a single accent lamp to warm up a corner.
The standard warm household glow.
- Bedrooms
- Living rooms
- Dining rooms
- Your safest default if you want warm and inviting.
- Use consistently within an area to avoid mismatched tones.
Still warm, but cleaner and slightly brighter.
- Kitchens
- Hallways
- Bathrooms
- General lighting
- A good middle ground if you want warm but not yellow.
- Pairs well with modern home finishes.
Balanced white with minimal warmth.
- Offices
- Laundry rooms
- Closets
- Modern interiors
- Leans neutral — works well when you don’t want warmth or coolness.
- Useful for areas where color accuracy matters.
Crisp, energetic, clean.
- Garages
- Basements
- Utility spaces
- Task-heavy areas
- Improves contrast and clarity for workspaces.
- Not ideal for living spaces unless intentionally modern.
Bright, blue-white, very high clarity.
- Workshops
- Detail-oriented tasks
- Bathrooms with large mirrors
- Makeup lighting
- Strong and clinical in large doses — use where performance matters.
- Not recommended for bedrooms or living rooms.
Quick Kelvin reference
2700K
3000K
4000–5000K