Sizing Your Chandelier Over a Dining Room Table
Commonly asked by many of our customers is the question of whether there is universal rule in sizing a chandelier over a dining room table. While the answer to this question is no, there are several means that can guide one in avoiding under sizing or over sizing a lighting fixture over an eating area.
As a general observation though I might first add that it has been my overwhelming experience that most people in viewing chandeliers for their dining rooms generally tend to oversize rather than undersize. I think that in the attempt to make a visually appealing statement with lighting many people do not understand or take in consideration the design limitations of their particular room or furnishings.
Chandeliers over dining areas are as a general rule are hung five and a half to six feet off the ground or approximately thirty inches over a table. As any general rule, you will find many exceptions, and certainly I have been involved in the lighting design of some larger homes with tremendously high ceilings where this rule would not apply. You should also be advised that if you are considering the installation of a bowl type of chandelier that the proper drop of such a fixture would be more like seven or more feet off the ground. In the case of traditional chandelier in a modest size home however, the five and a half to six feet will almost always apply resulting in an inevitable proportional and direct assessment with the piece as it pertains to the dining room table. What I am in fact saying that in most cases where a chandelier hangs right over a table proportion is critical. In very large homes where space is abundant, scaling is just as important but the fact remains that one has more “room” to play
with.
To achieve this table/light fixture balance, remember to leave at minimum nine inches on the tabletop unobstructed by the chandelier. Realize that if you have a rectangular table eighty-four inches long by forty-eight inches wide that your limitation is with the width of your table and not your length and that based on this rule, the maximum size of your light fixture should be thirty inches wide. In the case of a round table sixty inches wide, the widest chandelier that I would recommend would forty-two inches.
In addition to the above, consider the weight of your furnishings, are they heavy and require a complimentary feel. Do you have additional visual limitation as window or other obstructions, and how does the size of your prospective fixture play into the overall size of your room and other furnishings.
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