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Floor Lamps

Floor lamps are one of the most flexible light fittings available for New Zealand homes. They require no wiring, no ceiling point, and no installation. Plug in, position, and the lighting in a room changes immediately. Whether you are adding a reading lamp beside an armchair, layering ambient light into a lounge, or placing a statement fitting in a bedroom corner, a floor lamp shapes the atmosphere of a space without any permanent commitment. At Lighting Direct, you will find a comprehensive range of floor lamps in styles, finishes, and functions suited to every residential interior.

How to Choose a Floor Lamp

Choose a floor lamp based on three factors: the task it needs to perform, the height of the space, and the existing style of the room. A lamp chosen for reading has different requirements to one chosen purely for atmosphere, and a fitting that suits a 2.4-metre ceiling may look undersized in a double-height open-plan lounge.

Task requirements determine the lamp type. Directed, adjustable light for reading requires an arc or task floor lamp with a shade that angles toward the user. Ambient or decorative use suits a torchiere or drum floor lamp that diffuses light upward or outward across the room. Identifying the primary purpose before selecting a style avoids a fitting that looks right but performs poorly in practice.

Room scale guides sizing. A slim tripod or column floor lamp suits compact bedrooms and hallways. A wider arc lamp or statement fitting works better in a lounge or open-plan space where the lamp needs to contribute visually as well as functionally. As a general guide, most floor lamps range from 1.4 to 1.9 metres in height, with taller fittings suiting higher ceilings and larger rooms.

Where to Put a Floor Lamp

Floor lamps work best when positioned to fill a gap in the room's existing lighting scheme. Place one beside a reading chair, in a dim corner, alongside a sofa, or in a bedroom where a ceiling light alone creates flat, uniform illumination. The most effective placement is wherever overhead or wall lighting does not reach adequately.

Lounge and living room: an arc lamp positioned behind and to one side of a sofa delivers reading light directly to the user without requiring a side table. A torchiere in a corner softens the contrast between bright ceiling lights and darker wall areas, making the room feel more evenly lit and comfortable in the evening.

Bedroom: a floor lamp beside a bed or in a bedroom corner provides an alternative to overhead lighting for winding down in the evening. A warm 2700K globe at low output creates a restful atmosphere that a ceiling light cannot easily replicate.

Home office and study: a task floor lamp with an adjustable head positioned beside a desk supplements natural light during overcast days and provides focused output for extended work sessions. Choose a lamp with a 3000K to 4000K colour temperature for a clean, clear result that reduces eye fatigue.

Hallway and entry: a slim column or tripod floor lamp in a hallway or entryway adds warmth and a designed quality to a transitional space that is often lit only by a single ceiling fitting. A decorative floor lamp here also contributes to the first impression your home makes.

Reading nooks and corners: a floor lamp is the most practical way to light a reading corner or window seat where no ceiling point or power point exists nearby. A cantilever or arc design positions the light directly over the reading surface without the lamp occupying the same floor space as the chair or seat.

Floor Lamp Finishes and Styles

The finish of a floor lamp affects how it reads in a room both when lit and unlit. Matte black and brushed brass are the most consistent performers in contemporary and transitional NZ interiors, pairing well with both warm and neutral colour schemes. White and natural materials such as linen, rattan, and timber suit coastal and relaxed residential settings. Polished nickel and chrome suit cooler, more minimal spaces.

Consider the lamp's visual presence in the room during the day. A floor lamp with a strong design identity, such as a tripod or arc fitting in a bold finish, contributes to the room's interior character even when switched off. A more neutral fitting in a simple column or torchiere format works better when the goal is functional light without adding another visual element to manage.

Floor Lamp Buying Checklist

Before purchasing a floor lamp, confirm the application, the available floor space, and the power point location. These three factors determine which lamp type and size will work in practice, independent of style preference.

  • Identify the primary purpose: reading and task use, ambient layering, or decorative presence
  • Measure the available floor space and confirm the lamp base will not obstruct movement through the room
  • Check the distance from the nearest power point and confirm the lamp cord length is sufficient
  • Confirm the total lamp height suits the ceiling height and the scale of the room
  • Choose a colour temperature appropriate for the application: 2700K for ambient and bedroom use, 3000K to 4000K for task and reading use
  • Check whether a dimmable globe and compatible dimmer switch are required
  • Confirm the finish coordinates with existing metal elements in the room, including furniture hardware and other light fittings

Frequently Asked Questions About Floor Lamps

The questions below address the most common decisions customers face when selecting, positioning, and using floor lamps, including lamp types, sizing, placement, and the difference between arc and cantilever designs.

What is a floor lamp best used for?

A floor lamp is best used to add localised or ambient light to a room without ceiling wiring or permanent installation. The most common applications are reading beside a sofa or armchair, softening a dim corner in a living room or bedroom, and layering light in a space where a single overhead fitting creates flat or insufficient illumination. Because floor lamps are freestanding and portable, they can also be repositioned as the use of a room changes.

How tall are floor lamps?

Most floor lamps sold for residential use range from 1.4 to 1.9 metres in total height. Torchiere and statement floor lamps typically sit at the taller end of that range, between 1.6 and 1.9 metres. Task and reading floor lamps are often shorter and more compact, from 1.4 to 1.6 metres. Check the product specification for the exact height and the shade position measurement if reading height is important for your application.

What is a cantilever floor lamp?

A cantilever floor lamp has an offset arm that positions the shade to one side of the base rather than directly above it. This allows the light source to extend over a sofa, bed, or armchair without the lamp base needing to sit in the same floor space as the furniture. Cantilever floor lamps are particularly useful in compact rooms where a standard arc lamp is too wide, or in any situation where directed light is needed but floor space beside the furniture is limited.

What is the difference between an arc floor lamp and a cantilever floor lamp?

An arc floor lamp uses a long curved arm that sweeps out and over a seating area from a base positioned some distance away, typically 0.5 to 1.0 metres behind or beside the furniture. A cantilever floor lamp uses a shorter offset arm that extends the shade to the side of the base, keeping the overall footprint more compact. Arc lamps provide more dramatic reach and visual presence. Cantilever lamps are better suited to tighter spaces where a large arc would be impractical.

Do floor lamps provide enough light for a room?

A floor lamp is not designed to be the sole light source for a room. It works as part of a layered lighting scheme alongside ceiling lights, wall lights, or table lamps. As a task light for reading, a floor lamp with a globe producing 400 to 800 lumens provides sufficient directed output. As an ambient addition to a room, a torchiere or drum floor lamp at 250 to 500 lumens creates a comfortable secondary light layer without competing with the primary ceiling fitting.

Are floor lamps out of style?

Floor lamps remain a consistent feature of well-designed residential interiors and are particularly relevant in the current direction of NZ home design, which favours layered lighting over single-source overhead illumination. The range of available styles has expanded significantly, with arc, tripod, and cantilever floor lamps now available in finishes and proportions suited to contemporary, coastal, and transitional NZ interiors. The lamp style evolves, but the functional and atmospheric value of a well-placed floor lamp does not.