Painting A Description of Table Lamp Lighting
If this writer were an artist, then this writer would need to use a broad brush, while composing the following description of table lamp lighting. This article will begin by looking at two different versions of a lamp that might sit on an end or side table.
Pottery Barn makes and sells such lamps. Their March 2010 catalogue shows a lamp with an adjustable base. That lamp has been placed on a Bailey occasional table. An online shopper can order such a lamp, and choose to have a base with either a nickel or a bronze finish.
These PB lamps can be given a simple linen shade. There is a mix of different shades posted on potterybarn.com. The base for one of these lamps costs $150. The cost of a lamp shade ranges between $29 and $49.
The same PB catalogue includes pictures of Bradford candlestick lamps. The base of each lamp resembles an antique Spanish candlestick holder. Each aluminum base has a textured bronze finish.
Now if an online shopper wants to light a dark dining area, that visitor to a virtual furniture store might use a search box to discover new ways for lighting a table. That Internet viewer would probably be looking for something like the Cheshire lanterns made and sold by Pottery Barn. The March PB catalogue shows two lantern lights above a long dining room table.
On another page of the same publication, a reader finds a picture of a wine bottle chandelier. That chandelier has been crafted from iron and has a rasped finish. Like the Cheshire lanterns, that chandelier hangs over a dining room table.
The chandelier’s unique and striking design gives a different meaning to the term “table lamp lighting.” It forces anyone who wants to “paint” a description of such lighting to use a very wide brush.
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