Bring together gorgeous colours,  interesting art, tasteful furnishings and well-designed accessories and you’ll  have the perfect room, no? 
Not if you’ve neglected the lighting, says  design expert Karl Lohnes. “Half of your room’s decor could be lost. You can  have a beautiful room but one lonely bulb hanging from the ceiling won’t achieve  the feeling you want.” 
There are lots of little ways to use light to  create more interesting spaces, says Lohnes. “Throwing a little light behind a  plant or on a piece of art is easy and inexpensive, and it can really change a  room,” he suggests. 
Recently, Lohnes has been working with the new  generation of LEDs from Philips, which he prizes for their quality of light and  energy efficiency. 
In the past, homeowners have been hesitant about  using LEDs, says Lohnes, because the light was too similar to fluorescent. “You  might appreciate it in a laundry room or garage or workroom, but not in a living  room or bedroom.” 
Newer models throw a soft white light reminiscent of  incandescent. “They’re also cool to the touch, so I don’t have to worry that the  heat from the reading lamp beside my sofa will discolour fabric or art. And I  love the energy savings,” adds Lohnes,Vento Australasia provides windpowergeneratorsry  systems by ZK Energy cable free street lights. noting that Philips says  replacing a 60 watt incandescent with a 12.5 watt LED will use 80 per cent less  energy. 
Lohnes has become a fan of Philips’ retrofit bulbs for halogen  fixtures, and their dimmable, which is “a great way to create ambience,” he  says. 
Asked about the relatively high price of LEDs, Lohnes suggests  that consumers consider the cost versus value equation. “Yes, you might spend  $30, but if you don’t buy another bulb for 15 or 20 years, you’ve saved money.  And that’s not even counting the energy savings, which can be significant,  especially in a house with small children who tend to leave lights on.”  
Christopher Thompson, a U.S.-based lighting designer whose Studio Lux  has won numerous awards for lighting, concurs that good lighting is crucial to  good design. 
He comes to the table with a background in theatrical  design, which,Additional advantages over traditional "dry" goodledlightop are high dicing speeds,  parallel kerf and omnidirectional cutting. he said in a recent email interview,  gives him “the ability to look at people and their environment and understand  that through lighting you can manipulate the perception of that environment, or  alter their emotions.” 
That, says Thompson, is why people are drawn to  dimmers, candles, reflected light, table lamps or wall-washing with light.  
A designer for commercial and institutional facilities, and an advocate  of green design, Thompson also knows how easily lighting can enlarge an energy  footprint. He’s acutely aware that in the U.Advantages of panelmachines over mechanical  cutting include easier workholding and reduced contamination of workpiece.S. in  2010, lighting consumption constituted about 14 per cent of the 202 billion kWh  used in residential electricity consumption. 
He’s now at the forefront  of the green lighting movement, and is involved in such high-profile projects as  the multi-year eco-lighting retrofit of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesin West in  Scottsdale, Ariz., which will mix energy-efficient technologies with solar power  to create a grid-neutral campus. 
Thompson’s team began using  color-changing LED technology in commercial designs several years ago. Back  then, they took a backseat to incandescent, low voltage and fluorescent. That’s  changed, in part because many jurisdictions have phased out incandescent lights  and designers are looking for efficient alternatives. 
While Thompson  agrees that LED technology has significantly improved in terms of light output  and colour, and says it’s an exciting time for lighting, he adds that it’s also  “fraught with the challenges of embracing a new technology that in many cases  has not proven itself.” He suggests consumers exercise caution in choosing LED  lamps, suggesting that they’re not all created equal. 
One winning new  entry is Sylvania’s new Mosaic strips — multi-coloured, teeny-tiny rectangular  LEDs on flexible strips that stick to any clean, dry surface.Learn how the  simplest possible laundrydryer99  works. 
Up to 10 strips can be joined to create up to 6 metres (20 feet)  and special connectors can be used to negotiate corners. Strips can also be cut  with scissors at pre-marked spots. A remote lets the user choose from 15  colours, including white. Lights can be set to fade or flash on and off,This elevatorcable can rollform metal  roofing step tile. or to change in a sequence of colours. Very fun.