


This Bloomington home needed a serious lighting upgrade. The existing setup just wasn't cutting it - no real focal point, not enough ambient light, and nothing that tied the rooms together. That's a pretty common situation we run into, and it's one of the more satisfying jobs we get to tackle.
We handled two things here. First, we installed new recessed can lighting to fill in the ambient light throughout the space. Clean, flush, and evenly spaced - the kind of lighting that makes a room feel bigger without drawing attention to itself. It's one of those upgrades that homeowners wonder why they didn't do sooner.
Then came the statement piece - a large multi-arm chandelier with rope-wrapped detailing and white drum shades. This thing anchors the dining area in a big way. Interior lighting installation like this is part electrical work, part precision - a fixture this size has to be hung right, wired correctly, and level. No shortcuts.
The switch setup ties it all together. A clean double-toggle plate controls the chandelier and the recessed lights separately, giving the homeowner full control over the mood in the room. That kind of flexibility is something a lot of people overlook when planning a lighting layout, but it makes a real difference in everyday use.
Lighting does more for a home than most people realize. The right combination of a solid fixture and well-placed recessed lighting can completely change how a room feels - day or night. This Bloomington job is a good example of what that looks like when it all comes together.