Get the look of subtle glass pearl with this popular design.
Panel Brightnessi
Lightness-Darkness
The Panel Brightness rating assigned to each design is based on the average luminosity (0-Black to 255-White) of the digital artwork file. It can be used as a guideline to predict artwork light reduction of one design compared to another.
Average Luminosity (0-255) | Assigned Brightness Number | |
---|---|---|
Darkest | 1 – 139 | 1 |
Dark | 140 – 169 | 2 |
Medium | 170 – 199 | 3 |
Light | 200 – 219 | 4 |
Lightest | 220 – 255 | 5 |
Panel Brightness Examples:
#5: Best designs for kitchens, bathrooms, and other rooms requiring the brightest light.
#4: Good designs for kitchens and bathrooms or in rooms where high light throughput is desired.
#3: Good for most lighting locations. Can work for kitchens in conjunction with a lot of other light sources (i.e., windows or canned lights).
#2: Not as dark as #1. Requires some task lighting in the room. Used commonly in treatment rooms.
#1: This design selection is for ambient lighting only with several other light sources for tasks.
DarkestBrightest
Mr. & Mrs. B (verified owner) –
We used this as a skylight lens in our guest bathroom and are very pleased. It is much classier than the cheap "pebbly" lenses as another reviewer put it.
Karen A (verified owner) –
They look lovely but the bulb can be made out through the lenses. They let more light come through and the pattern is less prominent. We are going with LED's in the near future so these are fine for now and the bulb is only visible if you are directly under the lense.
Lori (verified owner) –
This light looks so nice! Really transformed the look of my drop ceiling & softened the glare of my fluorescent bulb. Customer service was also great & my item shipped quickly and arrived earlier than expected. Highly recommend & would definitely buy again!
Jeffrey (verified owner) –
A great improvement over the "pebbly", translucent plastic lenses--all three of which were replaced by three of these White Pearl diffusers in my small kitchen. The fluorescent light is now subtly subdued, smoothed, and quite nearly glare-free. Owing to their high light throughput, I think these will be even more effective with "warm" (3000K) bulbs, which are due in shortly. (One of the two-bulb fixtures currently sports one 4000K bulb and one 3000K bulb--which combination actually yields a startlingly attractive blend of light, through the White Pearl.)