Office Lighting
Focus, Without the Clinical Feel
Office lighting gets one thing catastrophically wrong in most homes and commercial spaces: it treats productivity as the only goal. The result is cool, flat, shadowless light that is technically adequate and experientially soul-destroying. Our office lighting collection draws from the broader Zenduce range to provide lighting that supports focus without making the room feel like a hospital corridor. Geometric minimalist pendants. Clean ceiling fixtures. Dimmable options for the evening when the same space becomes a reading room rather than a workroom. Pieces that look as considered on Zoom as they do in person.
- Neutral white for focus: 3500–4500K supports cognitive performance for screen-based work without the harshness of clinical cool white (5500K+). Most office-range fixtures offer neutral or cool white options.
- Glare control: Directional and diffused fixtures in this range are chosen with screen-adjacent use in mind. Avoid bare-bulb or high-brightness fixtures positioned in the line of sight between you and the screen.
- Dimmable options: For home offices that transition into evening reading rooms or casual spaces, a dimmable fixture that can shift toward warm white in the evening reduces eye strain and supports the transition out of work mode.
- Styles for home and commercial: From residential home offices to commercial fit-outs, our office range includes both restrained domestic pieces and more substantial commercial-grade fixtures.
Why Office Lighting Deserves as Much Attention as Any Other Room
- Zoom and video calls: The camera sees what the light creates. Overhead-only lighting creates shadows under the eyes and nose. A well-positioned desk lamp or wall-mounted fixture in front of you—not above—produces the most flattering and professional video image. See our wall lights and floor & table lights for options.
- Reduced eye fatigue: Screen work with insufficient ambient light forces the eyes to constantly adjust between a bright screen and a dark surrounding environment. A well-lit room with a fixture that provides even, mid-level ambient light reduces the contrast and the eye strain.
- The home office as design statement: The home office has moved from a hidden room to one that's regularly on video calls, photographed, and shown to clients. A considered chandelier or pendant in a home office signals the same quality of attention as the rest of the home.
- Layer for versatility: An overhead fixture for ambient light + a desk lamp for task light + a wall sconce for warmth = an office that works for every mode of use, from deep focus to video calls to evening reading.
Office Lighting by Style
- Minimalistic office: Clean geometric pendant or ceiling light, simple task lamp on the desk, matte black or brushed steel finishes.
- Scandinavian office: Timber-and-linen floor lamp, warm neutral ceiling fixture, natural material desk accessories.
- Post-Modern office: Statement pendant or ceiling fixture as the design focal point, everything else secondary.
- Commercial office: RAYVEN-style multi-arm ceiling lamp spanning a larger space, with task lighting at individual workstations.
Explore Office Lighting
Overhead: Chandeliers | Ceiling Lights | Pendant Lights
Task & Accent: Floor & Table Lights | Wall Lights
By Style: Minimalistic | Scandinavian | Metropolitan
Shop: All Office | Best Sellers | New Arrivals
How to Choose Office Lighting
- Colour temperature: 3500–4500K for daytime focus work. If the space is used in the evening, a dimmable fixture that allows you to shift toward 2700–3000K warm white helps disengage from work mode.
- Position relative to the screen: Never place a bright fixture directly behind the screen (causes glare on the monitor) or directly overhead at the desk position (casts shadows on the face for video calls). Slightly in front of and to the side of your primary position is ideal.
- Task light is not optional: An overhead fixture provides ambient light; it cannot provide adequate focused light at the desk surface. A desk lamp or pendant positioned specifically over the work surface is a separate and necessary layer.
- If the office is on video calls: Invest in a wall light or table lamp that sits in front of you at face height. This single addition improves video quality more than any camera upgrade.















































