Hello AT,
We recently moved and need a new light fixture for our dining room.
Our dining set was inherited and I'd also love to recover the chairs.
I'm hoping for suggestions that will act as a counterpoint to the traditional style of the set.
Can you help me?
While our dining room is open to the living room, we don't have any furniture for the living room yet (please ignore the toys) and I'd love to have suggestions for a vision of the space...





I think painting your walls a darker color would help. Check out "caramel sundae" by Behr (found out Home Depot). It might also be nice to paint the china cabinet white and hang a pendant lamp like this one.http://www.2modern.com/modern-furniture/Hanging-Lamps/Lights-Up-Meridian-Pendant
view cricketchirp's profile
I suggest a drum shaded pendant light or two, depending on the scale -- two smaller ones look great over a large table. check out Crate and Barrel's. http://www.crateandbarrel.com/family.aspx?c=1240&f=6912
view kimg924's profile
Well, you could go with the neo-classical lines of the furniture and go Colonial Revival with the fixture, like this, or possibly this. On the other hand, Streamline design would have been contemporaneous with your furniture and I really dig this.
I agree that a stronger wall color would be a good idea, but I'd shy away from painting that furniture if the finish is in good shape. If you do paint it, consider a nice thick, glossy black enamel.
view Ulrika's profile
I think other people are suggesting a darker wall color to add a little contrast (is the paint also washed out a little from the flash?). I think you could also achieve that with some brightly colored cushions for the chairs and coordinating colors on the table -- in the form of a runner, candle holders, etc.
in terms of a light fixture, I think you could add some sparkle with a more contemporary fixture. I'm thinking of those French fixtures encased in a mesh drum. The drum-shade idea could work too -- Restoration Hardware has some new two-tiered ones that look nice. Either way, hanging the light lower would also help the scale of the room.
view ottan's profile