Look & Learn: Pendant Lamps & Pops Of Color
We’re introducing a new feature here at YHL called Look & Learn, and it’s all about taking an inspiration room and trying to figure out how and why it works. Because admiring a beautiful space is always fun, but figuring out what elements and ideas can actually be borrowed or adapted for your very own casa (preferably on the cheap) is the icing on the cake. First we’ll take this gorgeous office/lounge by Sarah Richardson (one of my hands down favorite designers who’s right up there with Candice Olson and Nate Berkus):

The first thing you’ll probably notice is that the background (rug, sofa, desk, etc) is very light and neutral. Except for a few dark furniture legs and a small end table in a nice ebony finish (which add a pretty dash of contrast and interest) the whole room almost feels like a fluffy cream cloud. And no, this room probably wouldn’t survive three dogs and five kids with red Sharpies, but a few adaptations could really make it more pup/child-friendly (like a washable slipcovered sofa and a durable berber carpet that’s a tad darker). But the neutral background is less intriguing to us than the two touches that Sarah added to amp up the entire space:
- A large statement-making drum pendant (it’s like a stunning metallic sculpture in the room)
- Cheerful pops of punchy yellow (in the curtains, accent pillows and even the spine of one of the hardcover books on the coffee table)
The takeaway: any room with a subdued neutral base can definitely be transformed from blah to brilliant with a large look-at-me pendant light (even one from a thrift store that you spray paint) and some brightly colored curtains & throw pillows in a happy shade like sunshine yellow. Picture that room with white curtains and a white flush mount ceiling fixture. Yawn, right? I mean it wouldn’t be ugly but it wouldn’t be nearly as happy slash inviting slash charming as it is with those printed curtains, a few yellow throw pillows and that gorgeous metal pendant (it’s really like jewelry for the room).
So even if you don’t have much money you can probably find some discount fabric and use this tutorial to make no sew curtains and hunt down some sort of pendant on eBay, Craigslist, or even from a garage sale (and perhaps even go as far as to spray paint it a rich hammered gold tone). That’s a pretty straighforward to-do list for anyone with a basic neutral room that they’re looking to spiff up on a dime, right? We loved the simplicity of the single accent color idea (how easy is that?) and the DIY-worthy appeal (seriously, anyone can implement this plan to upgrade their space with a quick pillow, curtain, and light switcheroo).
Now let’s take a look at this cozy (and seemingly much more kid/dog friendly) space that we spotted a while back on A Life’s Design:

Again we’ll notice that the background is very neutral. White walls, a cream sofa, a sand colored rug, and a light woven ottoman add up to another airy and simple looking “base.” But it’s easy to see what really makes the room- and it’s surprisingly similar to the list that we came up with for our first inspiration image:
- A large statement-making drum pendant (this one’s even more oversized and full of natural texture like the ottoman and rug)
- Cheerful pops of punchy orange (in the art, accent pillows, throw and even the oranges on the ottoman)
Isn’t that funny? It’s almost as if it’s now an official formula. Any neutral room + some pops of one punchy accent color + a large pendant light = a cheerful and inviting space that feels polished and welcoming. So again, anyone with a relatively low-contrast room can adapt this idea for their very own home (it doesn’t matter if your walls, sofa and rug are varying shades of white, tan, mocha, gray, cream, etc- as long as they’re all generally similar in tone when you squint your eyes and look at the room from afar).
Just pick up some brightly colored pillows and maybe a throw for the sofa (we love TJ Maxx, Target, Home Goods, Marshall’s and Bed Bath & Beyond for chic yet cheap-o throw pillows) and you’re well on your way. Then introducing the big pendant light will add to the entire room’s posh-factor (check out how we upgraded a bare ceiling bulb with a $25 linen-like lamp shade right here) and bringing in a bit more of your accent color in everything from small scale art to fruit in a bowl on the coffee table should finish things off nicely (think of that last step as extra credit).
So that’s our first installment of Look & Learn. What do you guys think? Do you like the idea of taking inspiration rooms apart to see what really makes them tick (and hopefully adapting some ideas for your very own home on the cheap?). And while we’re on the subject of surprising room formulas that really seem to work, do you have any fail-safe decorating equations that you follow when it comes to adding style and interest to your casa? Spill it.
Psst- Looking for more decorating help? Check out our How To page and scroll down to the “Decorating Lessons” category to see tons of tutorials about everything from picking the right rug and sleuthing out the best window treatments to avoiding matchy-matchy syndrome and decorating an apartment or dorm.
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in my “house inspiration” folder on my computer, they nearly all follow this forumula- bright white background with pops of accent colors (usually magenta, yellow, OR turquoise). i hadn’t thought about the pendant light though. thanks for breaking it down! I love the “look and learn” idea
YAY! I think Look & Learn is a great addition to your blog! It’s kind of like you’re spilling out an inspiration folder onto your site. I love it. Your tips on how to DIY tricks that work for cheap? My cup runneth over. I was just getting electrician quotes to have a pendant light hung in our living room. (I’m telling you, we are in crazy kahoots sometimes.) Handy Hubby can usually handle this stuff however there is no ceiling light fixture there to run it off of. Thinking of hiring out on this one. How many quotes do you suggest on getting before making a decision?
Hey Dana,
We’re true deal hunting cheap-os so we love getting at least 4-5 estimates before we choose the man for the job. Oh and here’s a post about how we negotiate in the hopes of getting the best price without sacrificing quality (or safety of course). Hope it helps!
xo,
s
I love it! I’m constantly looking to see exactly why I love a room and you drawing attention to particular details and suggesting how to DIY is great. Thank you!
I adore Sarah Richardson. Some might say I am obsessed!! Love this new series. All your little hints really do help.
Love the educational breakdown. Katie Bower did a couple of posts like this with the explanation of decor composition, and I think it’s a really great way to teach others how to pin down a “look”. Good job, Youngsters!
Oh yeah we loved Katie Bower’s console table decorating observations! I just told her the other day on the phone how totally fun I think those posts are. It’s so funny how mathy she is with her percentages and those boxes she draws over her images. The girl’s the total package: a creative genius with a head for figures too! Meanwhile math gives me hives…
xo,
s
Love the new segment! Especially like seeing how the same formula can traslate in multiple ways. I feel educated for the day.
PS – just hung my first pair of IKEA Vivan curtains last night and they look a-maze-ing. Thanks for the inspiration!
Thank you all so much! I’m always trying to figure out what makes a room work and give it that extra pop. This post will really help me out in my family room since I have been trying to figure out how to get everything going in the right direction.
I love that second room!
Thanks again and I look forward to reading more of these!
Great post. These rooms look wonderful especially because they are so versatile and can change with the seasons because the main decor of the room is neutral.
Gotta love those drum pendants!They have a cool factor to them.
look and learn = brilliant! thanks for sharing your experience and expertise in yet another way!
Love love LOVE this new feature!! We’re in the process of taking a room that had TOO much color (our first furniture purchase 3 years ago was a matching living room set… all red… sigh… so many things wrong with that sentence!) and making it a completely neutral background with IKEA’s Ektorp line in white and beige – I’m hoping the fact I can swap out the accent colors whenever I like will prevent me from another let’s-start-this-room-from-scratch mini meltdown! :)
LOVE this! excited to see more. keep the inspiration coming!
Love the new post. It’s like designer 101. I like seeing if I picked the right elements that make the room. I looked at the pic, determined what I thought made it pop, then compared that with what you said. Great job on this idea, keep more coming.
Love it!
I think those look nice in all the put together rooms in magazine etc.. but everytime i try to imagine one in my home I feel it looks very dated 70s. oh well!
Yes! This is what I’m talkin about! I love the stuff yall come up with!
Thank you so much for the tips. This is definitely the look I’m striving for in our new living room. I love how crisp, clean and natural it all looks.
I think the Look and Learn is a great addition to your blog. I am always so intimidated by professionally designed rooms and I need not be :)
LOVE THIS! thank you for the break-down and I absolutely love the first room with the yellows and the gold pendant!
Are you reading my mind?! Seriously, I was JUST looking at pendant lights last night, trying to find what would work best in our dining/living room area. THANK YOU!
Love the new segment! This totally breaks it down as to why it works which will help me in the future while I tackle the not-quite-done rooms in my home. Request – how to make a dining room work?
I’m really excited for this new feature! I love the inspiration pics too.
Just an FYI for fans of Sarah. Sarah’s House 3 (not counting Sarah’s cottage), the farmhouse, starts airing March 9. Instead of shooting more Design Inc. (we’ve all seen the repeats of all 4 seasons since they stopped production a couple of years ago), she’s now shooting on a new show! And working on a book.
And yes to pops of colour. My bedrooms are designed this way, and I love them.
I ordered two of these oversized drum shades on ebay (the picture does NOT do them justice, they look like the fabric that they in fact are, and are less yellow and more natural colored than pictured):
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItemVersion&item=170425302949&view=all&tid=459034272007
I love this new feature! It sometimes feels like professionally designed rooms are out of reach but it really does help to break it down.
Love the new Look & Learn feature; it’s exactly what people like me need to learn how to look at rooms they love, and figure out why they love them, and why those rooms work; certainly a helpful step in discovering and developing your own style.
I’ve already bookmarked this post for my own inspiration folder!
The second picture I already had in my nesting inspiration folder. I say the room works because of this gorgeous whattocallit staggered bed/captains bed that makes me drool just looking at it. :-) That’s the first thing I’ll get when I win in the lottery. Along with a house with high ceilings so that it actually works…
I love this feature. It’s great! I don’t know what else to say.
Anything that helps me become less woefully ignorant about design and decor gets two big thumbs up. Maybe some of your readers are much more advanced and already know this stuff, but thank you for thinking of those of us who don’t! I like that you started out with relatively simple examples – perfect for the introduction of this new feature! It was very easy to follow along and understand what you’re talking about. Maybe in time we’ll be looking at very complex examples such as the rooms in Design*Sponge’s “Sneak Peek” features. Sometimes I love one of their spaces *so much* but don’t quite get why or how it works. (http://www.designspongeonline.com/category/sneak-peeks)
I love this idea, please continue with it! PS a design tip I’ve always used is to put a touch of black into every room. It is actually something my grandmother lived by, and she had excellent taste.
Love the post and the shout out to my favorite fellow Canadian, Sarah Richardson. Such a classy and brilliant yet down to earth gal… kindda like the 2 of u! Keep up the awesome work!
This feature is AWESOME!
I love this new feature! Such a great way to help all of the “design challenged” people like myself figure out how to make a room work. Great job as always!
I love this new feature! And I also love Sarah Richardson, Sarah’s house is probably my favourite HGTV show! Way to represent designers from North of the border! Woot woot!!
LOVE this feature & am already looking forward to the next one!!
I do a lot of this both on my site and with clients. Most people will tell you they like a space but can’t quite pinpoint what it is they like. I find that having variety of shape and texture are hugely important. So is multiple points of light and color. Uh oh….I think I just put myself out of business. =>
I love the Look & Learn feature, so helpful!!!
LOVE the new feature. Sometimes you know you love a room but can’t put your finger on why, and this new feature really points things out in a great way.
And I love Sarah Richardson and am SO GLAD she has the new show on HGTV. I’m glued to it on Saturday night. I’ve noticed that this house seems to have more color than she has used in the past but I think it is a good thing. The rooms are still simple and elegant but she seems to be adding a touch more colors. And I loved her outdoor episode a few weeks ago and wish I had room (and cash) for a pool.
love this feature! more please!
What a great new feature! It makes me want to go through my room inspiration pages (online & in a binder) and see if I can spot some trends for my spaces.
Thanks, as always, for inspiring!
Sherry and John, your blog literally gets better and better everyday. This segment is proof! It is exactly what I needed to put the finishing touches on our new place. THANK YOU!
THANK YOU! I am loving this new section! I can look at a magazine spread and see that I like a certain room…but, I do not have the natural ability to figure it out for my space. You made it seem so simple & easy! Thank you!
I am ALL about the pendant lighting. Its like the perfect hat which makes the whole outfit just Go.
Question: Our kitchen light is off- centered (on a slope-up ceiling) above our kitchen table. Is there a cheap/DIY/easyish way to hang a new light fixture/pendant so its actually centered above our table?
For some reason Im feeling like you addressed this once before (in a mood board?) for a reader- but cant seem to find it…
Help please?
Oh yeah just “swag” it with a plant hook on the ceiling (install the plant hook centered above the table and keep some extra length on the cord so it can be looped over the plant hook and it’ll hang centered above the table). Hope it helps!
xo,
s
love look & learn!!! this is exactly why your site is so appealing – it serves as a guide for dummies on how to decorate on the cheap. analyzing pictures for us non-art major folks is exactly what we need! thanks for this new feature :)
Agreed, great new feature on the blog.
What a great new feature!! Thanks for adding this on – it will be great for people who look at a room and scratch their head, saying … “It needs … something.”
I love Sara. Have you seen her show ‘Sara’s House’/ I think it’s on DIYnetwork or FLN or something. I love what she did to her house, I think she has great, clean, classic style.
Oh yeah we love her show and can’t wait to see the new ones that she has in the hopper.
xo,
s
Love it! Perfect feature for those of us who are design challenged. All those HGTV shows never break it down in detail the way you did. Thanks!!!
Just when I think this blog can’t get any better! I love this new feature–I simply don’t know what else to say. I look forward to many more of these posts. Very well done.
This is a really great feature, one I will look forward to reading! Very good idea, as always.
Love the new feature, can’t wait to see more!