apartment therapy changing the world, one room at a time


Good Question: What Lampshade for this Lamp?
Los Angeles

091508_lampshade.jpgHello! I recently bought a lamp on ebay, but I need help picking a shade. At the moment it is wearing one borrowed from my bedroom, temporarily. I'm all for this shape and color--modern, clean, etc.--but I'm thinking it's on the small side. Should I go up a size? Or, since I'll be buying a new one anyway, try another shape? I want to get this figured out before Restoration Hardware's lighting sale ends (25% off!). Thanks! -- Carolyn

 
 

First off Carolyn, great lamp! We're totally jealous and while the shade you have on it is ok, that lamp could really sing with the right one. We'll let everyone chime in, but here are general rules of thumb for picking lampshades:

According to this guide:
• square based lamps take square or rectangular shades
• round lamps take round, empire or drum shades.
• bell lamp shades look best on candlestick bases.

Sizing Rules of Thumb for Lampshades from here:
• Shade height should be about 3/4 the height of the base.
• The bottom of the shade should be wider than the widest part of the base.
• Shade width should approximately equal the height from bottom of base to socket.

Of course, we really like oversized shades, but that's just us, what do you guys think Carolyn should do?

Related:
A Dress as a Lampshade
Look! Knit Lampshade
Look! Yogurt container Lampshade
How To: Make a lampshade with a secret
How To: Make Ribbon Covered LampShade

Tags

Good Questions, lampshade, rule of thumb, size

Related Links

Share

Comments (8)

sure go one size up, will make it more modern

posted by Piztachio on September 15th 2008 at 11:21am
view Piztachio's profile

Funny, I've got an almost identical post on stylenorth today but with a range of shade choices to vote on--opinions?
http://stylenorth.ca/blog/2008/09/which-shade-for-these-lamps/

posted by ChrisToronto on September 15th 2008 at 11:41am
view ChrisToronto's profile

Nice lamp and it looks OK and a bigger shade might dwarf the lamp. Maybe a shorter but wider shade. The white seems a little starkly modern for the lamp and the room, but time will take care of that. Is it linen? If not, try linen - more texture and less white.

posted by Bo Placebo on September 15th 2008 at 12:02pm
view Bo Placebo's profile

I'd go for a tall/narrow drum shade (1.5x-2x taller, @ same diameter as the top ring you have currently) in an off-white - Then I'd get some woven fabric trim in a shade similar to the base (greek key maybe?) and hot glue it around the base and top of the shade to make it more unique and coordinated with the base.

posted by bepsf on September 15th 2008 at 12:36pm
view bepsf's profile

You're absolutely right that the shade is too small. I hate skimpy shades! It always makes it look like you were too cheap to buy something that fit.

Anyhoo, to make the lamp look more modern, I'd go with an east/west drum shade (wider than tall in about a 2:1 ratio). If you could find a creamy tan one with a grasscloth texture, it would be perfect. A single tier fiberglass one would look really nice, if you can find one for a decent price.

If you go with an empire or framed shade, that will make the lamp look more craftsman style. Which might be what you were going for. Anyway, it's a fabulous base. Good find!


**What qualifies me to answer a shade question? A serious lamp fetish, over 500 vintage lamps and shades in my own collection (yeah, in my house, right now), hundreds more sold on ebay, plus a great deal of experience making custom shades.

posted by superbeetle on September 15th 2008 at 1:29pm
view superbeetle's profile

A low profile drum shade; shorter and wider than what you have there will create a cleaner more modern look.

posted by msbeachwood on September 15th 2008 at 1:54pm
view msbeachwood's profile

Take the base into Restoration Hardware and try on the shades in the store. Given your white walls and white art, and to reduce glare hitting the screen - consider a linen, dark or metallic colored shade. Picking a shade by "maybe it will look better" is expensive.

-- If you are shopping online, then go into a local lighting store (or Target) and try shades on there, just to get a sense for how it will look.

posted by m_j_s on September 16th 2008 at 7:11am
view m_j_s's profile

Drum in darker tone

posted by hippyvieja on November 9th 2009 at 8:59pm
view hippyvieja's profile