Struggle to find the right antique lighting for your old house?
You’re not alone! If you’re like me, you want lighting that’s practical yet faithful to your house’s history. I’ve discussed the lengths you can go to restoring your home in a previous blog post.
I developed a passion for antique lighting when I moved into my house. You can’t beat an old gas light converted to electricity or an early electric fitting for quality and adding period character.
However, I went a bit crazy with this passion, as this huge Art Nouveau ‘gasolier’ in my former dining room shows (it was a bargain, promise!).
As a result, I made many mistakes during this early spending spree. I have now sold many of these fittings.
Getting the right type of antique lighting style for your home is dependent on its location, status and age as well as the period you’re trying to replicate.
So here’s what I’ve learnt.
Like the VHS vs Betamax video recorder battle of the early 1980s, gas and electric lighting competed to take over from oil light in the early 1900s home.
Gas lighting was ahead in urban working and middle-class homes thanks to the invention of coin-operated gas meters.
In contrast, the upper classes felt gas was ‘common’, so continued with oil and candle lighting until they installed electricity.
Gas lighting was also a rare feature in rural homes as gas works were based in towns and cities.
Oil lights in a 1950s rural interiorAlthough Edwardian builders often constructed middle-class houses with electricity, British householders only fully embraced electricity from the 1930s.
The Victorians would’ve been dazzled by the light in our homes today as the average gas light or early light bulb was equivalent to a 10-watt bulb, which you can’t even buy now!
Victorians sat directly under a light source when they read or sewed, hence gas lights being positioned over a parlour fireplace or above a kitchen table as shown below.
So don’t be tempted to fill each corner with period-style fittings like a pub!
Above all, people of yesteryear supplemented gas or early electric lighting with oil lamps – a nice extra touch in your drawing room or kitchen.
Some gas lights were elaborate and took on the fashions of the time to appeal to the middle-class market.
For instance, this 1913 Veritas Gas Light Catalogue shows the huge range of lights available in the early 20th century.
However, gas lighting in the working-class home was simple as this slum interior shows.
Most urban housing had gas lighting by 1900 but householders used it sparingly due to cost.
People opted for candles or oil lamps to walk to bed, reducing the need for gas lighting upstairs. Above all, Victorians had suspicions about the health impact of gas so often avoided gas lighting in bedrooms.
However, I was lucky enough to find traces of old gas light pipes in my bedrooms. Each room had one fitting off-centre above the fireplace and I’ve placed antique gas lights in these original positions for show.
Furthermore, Victorian house builders often installed bedroom gas lights next to windows to replicate natural light, as this photo shows.
Recommended article:Downlit gas lights were only widely available after 1905 so true Victorian gas lights were upright (take note museum curators and set designers!).
Downlit swan-neck fittings like this one in my kitchen were particularly popular. Manufacturers made air vents from ceramic, brass or tin, and later produced chrome-plated versions from the 1920s.
One of the earliest and most widely available upright gas burners was a ‘batwing’ as in my third bedroom. It let off a flat gas jet of blue light.
Upright incandescent burners from the 1890s gave out a brighter and cleaner light. For example, I have installed an electric converted version in my parlour.
The Victorian and Edwardians updated their homes as new technologies became available like we do now. But they often converted their old upright fittings to reduce costs.
For example, I have installed a downlight converter on an upright fitting in my main bedroom.
Above all, the Victorians positioned gas lights much lower than modern lights as they were less powerful.
For instance, a Victorian book on house building recommends mantle lights were installed at five foot from the floor, and hall and bathroom fittings set at six foot.
Low fittings above your fireplace are less of a safety risk, but low central fittings could be dangerous unless you have a table beneath.
Don’t be afraid to use unconverted gas lights for decoration and supplement them with discreet modern fittings as I have in my bedrooms.
Unfortunately, these rooms originally only had one gas light, so not very practical for modern life!
Above all, there are many unconverted gas lights or unsafe old electric fittings available on online auction sites which can be rewired but make sure you get a professional to convert them!
However, I found that gas fittings are not easy to convert as connecting parts need to be drilled out. I used exposed gold wiring for fittings with awkward angles as shown here.
An easier but more expensive alternative is to buy ready-converted fittings from a reputable antique light dealer such as Jones Antique Lighting.
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During the 63 years of Queen Victoria's reign, 
      from 1837 to 1901, life in ordinary houses was transformed by a succession 
      of technological developments which we now take for granted: flushing toilets, 
      plumbed-in baths and showers, regular postal deliveries and light fittings 
      capable of illuminating whole rooms at a time. 
      
      At the start of the Victorian period most houses were lit by candles and 
      oil lamps. Interior fittings included chandeliers (suspended from the ceiling) 
      and sconces (fixed to the wall). However these were mainly used on special 
      occasions, and most ordinary events after sunset took place using portable 
      light sources such as candlesticks, candelabra (bracketed candlesticks) 
      and oil lamps, and by the light of the fire. By the end of the period gas 
      lighting was common in urban homes and electricity was being introduced 
      in many. 
      
      CANDLES
      
      Three types of candle were commonly used at the start of the period; tallow, 
      spermaceti and beeswax. Tallow candles made from animal fat in moulds were 
      the cheapest but they burnt with a smoky flame which produced progressively 
      less and less light - and they stank. Spermaceti wax, made from whale oil, 
      was harder than either beeswax or tallow and was least likely to soften 
      in hot weather. Improvements in the design of the wicks shortly before the 
      Victorian period commenced had eliminated guttering, and the plaited wicks 
      introduced in the 1820s curled out of the flame as they burnt, eliminating 
      the need for constant trimming which plagued earlier candles. By the end 
      of the century the modern paraffin wax candle was the most commonly used, 
      being cheap, odourless and reliable.
      
      Chandeliers, sconces and candelabra varied from their Georgian predecessors 
      in style only, although shades became popular in the taste for sumptuous 
      decoration and richness in the late 19th century. The most significant technological 
      improvements affected various lamps fitted with candles, reflectors and 
      lenses, often with sophisticated spring-loaded mechanisms for ensuring that 
      the flame remained at the same height relative to the lens or shade, forcing 
      the candle to rise as it burnt. 
      
      Candlelight was used for most ordinary activities throughout the Victorian 
      period, from dining and playing cards to cooking, particularly in areas 
      where there was no gas, until finally eclipsed by electric light. Photographs 
      of interiors taken by the architectural photographer H Bedford Lemere between 
      1890 and 1910 (reproduced in The Opulent Eye - see Recommended Reading) 
      show that in the 1890s fashionable hotels and homes were still being lit 
      by candlelight and oil lamps. In the drawing rooms and dining rooms of the 
      wealthy, candelabra were often positioned on the mantlepiece in front of 
      a pier glass mirror, sconces were also common and on the tables there were 
      oil lamps, candlesticks and candelabra, often in addition to gasoliers above. 
      In most cases the candles had shades, some with frills and tassels, others 
      plain, perhaps made of paper. In the photographs taken in the early 20th 
      century, many of the candle fittings seen were empty. The frills and tassels 
      had gone, and the interiors were cool and uncluttered by comparison. Many 
      of the electric light fittings shown were converted chandeliers and sconces 
      with light bulbs protruding from imitation candles, illustrating a nostalgia 
      for the candle which remains as strong today.
      
      OIL LAMPS 
      
      Oil had been burnt in lamps at least since the Palaeolithic age, and the 
      cheapest light fittings used in Victorian homes had changed little since 
      then, with a simple wick protruding from a small container of whale oil 
      or vegetable oil. However, much brighter and more sophisticated lamps had 
      emerged late in the 18th century, the most important being the Argand oil 
      lamp. This lamp had a broad flat wick held between two metal cylinders to 
      form a circular wick, with air drawn through it and around it. This in itself 
      was a revolutionary idea, but its inventor, Aimé Argand also discovered 
      that by placing a tube or 'chimney' over the flame, the hot gases from the 
      flame rose rapidly creating a draught and drawing air in from below. Fanned 
      by a draught from both inside and outside the circular wick, the poor spluttering 
      flame of early lamps was transformed into a bright, efficient light source 
      (see illustration).
      
      The one disadvantage for the Argand oil lamp and its many imitators in the 
      early Victorian period was that the best oil then available, colza, was 
      so thick and viscous that it had to be fed to the wick either by gravity 
      from a reservoir above, or pumped up from below. Most colza oil lamps have 
      a reservoir often shaped like a classical urn to one side which in some 
      fittings obstructed the light. The Sinumbra lamp got around the problem 
      by having a circular reservoir around the base of the glass light shade.
      
               
Before the advent of the incandescent mantle, 
        gas lighting relied on a simple open flame. By the mid 19th century the 
        most common burners produced fan-shaped flames like the Batswing and Fish 
        Tail burners. The Argand burner, which was successfully adapted for gas, 
        was the principal exception with its circular flame. 
        
        All these gas light fittings and the early incandescent mantles had to point 
        upwards directing the light towards the ceiling and away from where the 
        light was needed most, and it was not until 1897 that the gas mantle was 
        adapted to burn downwards - a useful event to remember when dating gas fittings.
        
         Simple gas lights incorporated a plain 
          brass, copper or iron gas supply tube with a tap for switching the gas on 
          and off, terminating in a burner shielded from direct view by a shade or 
          globe to diffuse the light. Some burners such as the Argand also incorporated 
          a glass tube or chimney, and around which could be placed a larger shade 
          of glass or silk. Pendant lights could consist of little more than a vertical 
          rod turned at right angles at the end to support the up-turned burner, but 
          they were rarely that simple in the Victorian period. Every element of the 
          gas light offered an opportunity for embellishment. Early pendant fittings 
          often incorporated two or more arms forming a loop, gracefully curving down 
          around the glass lamp shade, with the lamp cradled below. In another design 
          scrolling arms radiated from a central baluster, a design echoed by the 
          scrolling arms of the wall brackets.
          
          The shades provided another opportunity for embellishment. Most glass shades 
          were translucent, either frosted or coloured and were often extremely ornate, 
          with cut glass decoration or etched patterns. The most elaborate shapes 
          appeared at the end of the 19th century when designs reached their most 
          opulent in the Louis XV revival. As well as ornate silk shades on lamps 
          with chimneys, a variety of other more delicate devices were introduced 
          at different times, such as shades of glass beads.
          
          By 1890 main stream taste had begun to change dramatically. Although William 
          Morris, the father of the Arts and Crafts Movement, had established Morris 
          and Co almost 40 years earlier, it was the second generation of craftsmen 
          who started to manufacture products on a larger scale, often adopting the 
          industrial processes reviled by Morris. One of the greatest and most prolific 
          designers of the new style was W A S Benson who, with the encouragement 
          of William Morris, had set up his own workshop making light fittings and 
          other metalwork. His fittings, like those of many of his contemporaries, 
          were mass-produced, selling through Liberty's in London in particular. 
          
          The Arts and Crafts style swept out the clutter from the Victorian interior, 
          leaving them lighter and brighter in every sense. Richly decorated surfaces 
          were replaced by plain ones relying on the warmth of natural materials and 
          simple craftsmanship for their interest. Those elements like the fireplaces 
          and light fittings which remained as richly ornamented as ever before took 
          on a new importance, focussing attention. Often the decoration of fittings 
          can be described as 'Art Nouveau' for their graceful, flowing lines and 
          lack of any clear historical influence, but revivalism remained common, 
          and most homes at the turn of the 19th century borrowed heavily from the 
          Tudor and Elizabethan periods in particular. 
          
          ELECTRIC LIGHTING
          
          The rise of the Arts and Crafts movement coincided with the emergence of 
          electric lighting, and although many new homes continued to be built with 
          gas lighting until the First World War, Benson's work and that of other 
          leading Arts and Crafts designers is often associated with electric light 
          fittings. 
          
          In 1879 Thomas Edison beat rivals like Sir Joseph Swan to perfect the first 
          viable incandescent light bulb. One year later, Cragside, a rambling mansion 
          near Newcastle designed by Norman Shaw, was the first house to be lit electrically, 
          using Swan's 'electric lamps'. 
          
          The light bulb had enormous novelty value and the earliest fittings displayed 
          the bulb quite prominently. Early light bulbs were available in a wide variety 
          of shapes and patterns, often highly ornamented, but as the novelty value 
          wore off and the short life span of the bulb was recognised, attention turned 
          back to the shade and the fittings themselves.
          
          By Queen Victoria's death in January 1901, electric lighting was still in its infancy. 
          Gas lighting was common in the cities and larger towns, supplemented by 
          candles and oil lamps, but in smaller towns and villages and in the countryside 
          lighting remained almost exclusively by candles and oil lamps. All the principal 
          forms of lighting were thus in use at the same time, and it was not until 
          after the First World War that electric lighting finally emerged as the 
          predominant source of light in the home.
          
          
          Recommended Reading
            
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