Kitchen sink lighting - separate switch?
11 years ago
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- 11 years ago
- 11 years ago
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Under cabinet light above sink with switch needed
Comments (1)How about using led? EW profile, maxlite, UniLume are possible choices. They are all dimmable. The UniLume has it's own on off switch....See MoreGoing from dual switch to two separate switches?
Comments (5)Okay, I must have done something wrong. I left the two whites that were spliced together alone. I took the red from the dual switch and connected it and one white from each of the two switches together. I then took the two black wires and connected one to the black from one switch and one to the black from the other switch. The switch was controlling an overhead light in my kitchen and an outside light at my kitchen door. As it's now wired I can have the kitchen light on by itself, but the outside light only works when then the kitchen light is also on. Did I do something wrong?...See MoreNeed help with lighting over kitchen - how many lights, switch?, etc.
Comments (1)@jessicabaskerville, Given the extra ceiling height, your open area plan, and overall island size I suggest using 3 pendants of the size you're currently considering. See attached image for approximate layout. Keep the height so anyone standing at the island can see through to other spaces un-obstructed by the base of the pendants. The island pendants should be on a separate dimmer for better overall control of kitchen lighting. Also, be careful of your bulb choice since bare bulbs will produce some glare (another reason to use a separate dimmer). Please post pics when your project is completed....See MoreSame or separate switches.
Comments (4)I don't think there's a straight yay or nay answer to this. Think through how you use your kitchen, all the kitchen scenarios your family goes through, and what lighting will suit you best in those situations. Then make sure your switches will allow for those situations and call it good. I grew up with a kitchen where the undercabinet lights were on a separate switch from all the ceiling cans. The cans are on all the time whenever anything is being done in the kitchen. The undercabinet lights are sometimes turned on as well during serious cooking projects, but that is pretty infrequent. They're actually used most often after all serious kitchen activity has ended for the evening (after dinner is done and all cleaned up), at which point only the undercabinet lighting is left on and then functions almost like a night light. The kitchen is pretty central in my parents' home, and we'd often have to walk through it in the evening or do something small in it like get some water. For those activities, the low light of the undercabinets was enough. Sort of like the lighting on an airplane when they turn everything down so people can go to sleep easily but also can still see enough to walk down the aisles safely. When I was designing my own kitchen in an open layout condo, I went overboard giving myself options for lighting. It was/is my first experience living in an open layout, and I wasn't sure of all living/lighting scenarios we were going to encounter. We have three light switches for the kitchen. We have only one short stretch of normal uppers, so one light switch controls the lights inside (all the uppers are glass) and under those cabinets. Another light switch controls two cans that are above the kitchen sink and the counter right next to it. The third switch controls the other five ish cans in the kitchen. On the one hand, it's a little annoying to have three switches. It's been years, and I still don't have the line-up memorized. I just randomly hit one after another till I get what I want. On the other hand, I'm really glad to have the options. As it turns out, we almost never use the undercabinet/inner cabinet lighting. They're above a 30-inch deep counter, and so very little of the counter there is in shadow. Plus, compared to the ceiling cans, the inner/under cabinet light isn't super bright and is a cooler color that I don't find to be as friendly as I want my kitchen to be. It's more like cool bachelor pad party lighting and something that is good for resale, but it doesn't provide anything the cans don't do better during daily use. When I cook, I turn on all the cans everywhere by hitting the other two switches. It makes the kitchen WONDERFULLY bright for serious-all-over-the-kitchen cooking, but that amount of light is definitely overkill for small kitchen activities. When I'm doing something small while my husband is watching something on TV, I turn on just the two cans over the sink (like a spotlight on that part of the kitchen) so I can see what I need to see while limiting how much light gets reflected in the TV screen. For all other kitchen scenarios, I just tap the easiest switch closest to the door which turns on five ish cans at once, which is plenty of lighting to do anything except serious cooking. I don't think we have ever used the dimming capabilities of any of these lights. I'm positive your mileage will vary, but I hope that explanation will help you to think of and to run through your family's likely scenarios....See MoreRelated Professionals
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