Overview
Description
Specifications
Delivery & Returns
FAQs
Knowledge Hub
A Lantern on the Ceiling.
Take the proportions of a heritage wall lantern, the tall, slender form, clear glass panels in a warm metal frame, aged brass that belongs in a room rather than just completing a circuit, and bring them to the ceiling without the pendant drop. The brushed aged brass frame holds clear glass panels that keep the bulb visible and the light unfiltered, sitting against the ceiling rose with the confidence of a fitting that was chosen for the room. Dimmable with a compatible switch. One E27 bulb required, sold separately. Matching items available.
Tall, Narrow, and Intentional.
- Profile: Tall and narrow, 335mm deep, 170mm across, a lantern silhouette rather than a flat dome.
- Frame: Brushed aged brass steel, warm and settled rather than polished bright.
- Glass: Clear panels, untinted and unfrosted, keeping the light output full and the bulb visible.
- Bulb: E27 screw cap, 10W LED maximum, sold separately; warm filament at 2700K strongly recommended.
- Dimmable: Yes, with a compatible trailing-edge dimmer switch; Class 1, earth wire required, 220-240V.
- IP rating: IP20, dry interior spaces only.
Rooms With a Sense of History
Period hallways, cottage kitchens, Victorian terrace landings where a pendant has never been an option: this fitting belongs in all of them. Aged brass and clear glass is a combination domestic lighting has used for generations in wall lanterns and outdoor fittings, and it translates to the ceiling with the same appropriate quality. Matching wall lights are available in the same collection. For ideas on how warm metals and considered light sources build a genuinely welcoming space, the industrial living room design guide covers the principles clearly.
Not a Dome. A Lantern.
There is a shape in domestic lighting trusted for centuries: the lantern. A frame of warm metal. Clear glass panels. A form that looks like an architectural object rather than a functional fitting. This brass glass panel flush ceiling light is that shape, brought to the ceiling in a tall, slender profile that keeps every centimetre of headroom intact while arriving with real presence. The frame is finished in brushed aged brass, not polished bright or gold but the quieter, slightly darkened warmth of brass that has earned its tone over time.
The result is a flush fitting with the visual presence of a pendant lantern. Where a flat dome tries to go unnoticed, this one arrives with a settled verticality that gives a hallway, a kitchen or a low-ceilinged room a ceiling light that actually looks as though it belongs there on purpose. Matching items from the same collection can extend the aged brass and glass language to a wall light or table lamp in the same space.
What a Lantern Gives a Room
- Visual presence without pendant drop. The tall, narrow silhouette creates architectural interest overhead without hanging below the ceiling the way a pendant does, keeping headroom intact.
- Aged brass that belongs in a period or warm-palette room. Quieter and more settled than polished brass, closer to original ironmongery in a Victorian terrace than anything freshly plated. Heritage paint colours, warm stone and natural timber find this finish entirely at home.
- Clear glass that lets the light travel freely. Plain, untinted, unfrosted glass: a warm filament E27 visible through clear glass in an aged brass frame looks like a lit object rather than a covered bulb.
- Matching items for a co-ordinated scheme. Matching wall lights are available in the same collection. Where ceiling and wall lights share a family, the scheme feels intentional in a way mismatched fittings never achieve.
- Dimmable for rooms that need more than one setting. With a compatible trailing-edge dimmer, it moves from the practical brightness of a working kitchen to the lower warmth of an evening hallway.
- Suitable for the rooms where choices feel most limited. Low-ceilinged hallways, Victorian landings, small kitchens with no room for a pendant: the spaces where most fittings disappoint are where this one earns its keep.
What Aged Brass Actually Looks Like
Polished brass announces itself in a room with the confidence of something recently cleaned. Aged brass does the opposite. The brushed surface removes the sheen and the ageing process introduces a slightly darkened, warm tone closer to a Victorian door knocker than anything off a production line last week. In rooms built around heritage colours, deep greens, warm whites, clay and ochre, it feels as though it was always there. Those pairing warm brass overhead with something at a lower level might find the industrial brass desk lamp a natural companion.
The Rooms It Was Built For
A Victorian terrace hallway with tessellated tile flooring and a narrow ceiling that has never had more than the plainest white bowl fitting: this light changes that entirely. The aged brass and clear glass belong in that hallway as naturally as the ironwork on the front door. A low-ceilinged kitchen in a cottage where the charm of the space has always been let down by the utilitarian ceiling fitting. A landing where matching wall lights from the same collection will run alongside. For ideas on approaching a narrow hallway with considered lighting that transforms the mood without compromising the height, this guide to brightening a narrow dark hallway covers the key principles.
Check These Before You Buy
- Bulb not included , E27 screw cap required. E27 screw cap, 10W LED maximum, sold separately. A warm filament at 2700K glows amber through clear glass in an aged brass frame and gives the lantern its character. A cool white above 4000K loses the warmth of the brass entirely.
- Class 1 wiring , earth wire required. Class 1 means a dedicated earth wire must be present in the ceiling circuit. Most UK homes wired after 1966 will have this. Older wiring should be confirmed before ordering.
- Dimmable with a compatible trailing-edge switch. Full dimming range only with a compatible trailing-edge dimmer installed. A standard on/off switch gives full brightness only.
Delivery
| Service | Timescale | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | 3-5 working days | Free |
| Next working day | Order before 4pm | £5.95 |
UK mainland only. Orders placed on weekends or bank holidays are dispatched the next working day.
We are unable to deliver to Northern Ireland, the Scottish Isles, Jersey, Guernsey, the Isle of Wight, the Isle of Man, or the Isles of Scilly. Full delivery information.
Returns
28-day returns policy. Contact us within 28 days of receipt if you are not happy with your order.
Items must be returned unused and in their original packaging. Our UK-based team will guide you through the process. Full returns information.
Brass Lantern Flush Light: Your Questions
The tall, narrow profile gives this fitting its lantern character. Most flush fittings are wide and flat, designed to minimise presence. This one does the opposite, bringing the proportions of a wall lantern to the ceiling: distinctive where a plain dome has always been a missed opportunity.
Not at all. Polished brass is bright and yellow. Aged brass is brushed and darkened, closer to original door furniture than anything freshly plated. In a period home it looks as though it was always there.
No bulb included. E27 screw cap, 10W LED maximum. Warm filament at 2700K: through clear glass in an aged brass frame it glows amber and the fitting looks like a lit lantern. Cool white above 4000K removes the brass warmth entirely.
Yes. Full dimming range with a compatible trailing-edge dimmer installed. Bright when the space needs to be functional, lower and warmer in the evening. A standard on/off switch gives full brightness only, so plan for the dimmer at the same time as the fitting.
Best in rooms with warmth and material honesty: original features, warm timber, heritage paints. In a period home it is entirely at home; in a modern interior with a warm palette it fits well. In a cool chrome-and-grey scheme it would look out of place.
Yes. Class 1 means a dedicated earth wire must be present in the circuit. Most UK homes wired after 1966 have this as standard. Older wiring should be confirmed by a qualified person before installation.
Yes. Matching items in the same aged brass and clear glass are available from the same collection, so a hallway or landing can carry the same design language from ceiling to walls. Those wanting a warm-toned companion at table height might also consider the classic glass touch table lamp.
Yes. Flush mounting means no headroom is lost. The tall, narrow profile gives a hallway actual presence rather than a plain bowl, which makes a real difference to how a narrow space feels. Aged brass and clear glass read well against tiled floors and painted walls.
IP20 means no moisture protection. Suitable for dry rooms: hallways, kitchens away from steam, living rooms, bedrooms and landings. Not for bathrooms or steam-exposed positions, where IP44 or higher is required.
Lighting a Home With History
Period homes, original features and heritage schemes ask more of a ceiling fitting than a plain white dome can give. These guides cover how warm metal finishes, considered bulb choices and layered light sources work together in the rooms where it matters most.
Overview
A Lantern on the Ceiling.
Take the proportions of a heritage wall lantern, the tall, slender form, clear glass panels in a warm metal frame, aged brass that belongs in a room rather than just completing a circuit, and bring them to the ceiling without the pendant drop. The brushed aged brass frame holds clear glass panels that keep the bulb visible and the light unfiltered, sitting against the ceiling rose with the confidence of a fitting that was chosen for the room. Dimmable with a compatible switch. One E27 bulb required, sold separately. Matching items available.
Tall, Narrow, and Intentional.
- Profile: Tall and narrow, 335mm deep, 170mm across, a lantern silhouette rather than a flat dome.
- Frame: Brushed aged brass steel, warm and settled rather than polished bright.
- Glass: Clear panels, untinted and unfrosted, keeping the light output full and the bulb visible.
- Bulb: E27 screw cap, 10W LED maximum, sold separately; warm filament at 2700K strongly recommended.
- Dimmable: Yes, with a compatible trailing-edge dimmer switch; Class 1, earth wire required, 220-240V.
- IP rating: IP20, dry interior spaces only.
Rooms With a Sense of History
Period hallways, cottage kitchens, Victorian terrace landings where a pendant has never been an option: this fitting belongs in all of them. Aged brass and clear glass is a combination domestic lighting has used for generations in wall lanterns and outdoor fittings, and it translates to the ceiling with the same appropriate quality. Matching wall lights are available in the same collection. For ideas on how warm metals and considered light sources build a genuinely welcoming space, the industrial living room design guide covers the principles clearly.
Description
Not a Dome. A Lantern.
There is a shape in domestic lighting trusted for centuries: the lantern. A frame of warm metal. Clear glass panels. A form that looks like an architectural object rather than a functional fitting. This brass glass panel flush ceiling light is that shape, brought to the ceiling in a tall, slender profile that keeps every centimetre of headroom intact while arriving with real presence. The frame is finished in brushed aged brass, not polished bright or gold but the quieter, slightly darkened warmth of brass that has earned its tone over time.
The result is a flush fitting with the visual presence of a pendant lantern. Where a flat dome tries to go unnoticed, this one arrives with a settled verticality that gives a hallway, a kitchen or a low-ceilinged room a ceiling light that actually looks as though it belongs there on purpose. Matching items from the same collection can extend the aged brass and glass language to a wall light or table lamp in the same space.
What a Lantern Gives a Room
- Visual presence without pendant drop. The tall, narrow silhouette creates architectural interest overhead without hanging below the ceiling the way a pendant does, keeping headroom intact.
- Aged brass that belongs in a period or warm-palette room. Quieter and more settled than polished brass, closer to original ironmongery in a Victorian terrace than anything freshly plated. Heritage paint colours, warm stone and natural timber find this finish entirely at home.
- Clear glass that lets the light travel freely. Plain, untinted, unfrosted glass: a warm filament E27 visible through clear glass in an aged brass frame looks like a lit object rather than a covered bulb.
- Matching items for a co-ordinated scheme. Matching wall lights are available in the same collection. Where ceiling and wall lights share a family, the scheme feels intentional in a way mismatched fittings never achieve.
- Dimmable for rooms that need more than one setting. With a compatible trailing-edge dimmer, it moves from the practical brightness of a working kitchen to the lower warmth of an evening hallway.
- Suitable for the rooms where choices feel most limited. Low-ceilinged hallways, Victorian landings, small kitchens with no room for a pendant: the spaces where most fittings disappoint are where this one earns its keep.
What Aged Brass Actually Looks Like
Polished brass announces itself in a room with the confidence of something recently cleaned. Aged brass does the opposite. The brushed surface removes the sheen and the ageing process introduces a slightly darkened, warm tone closer to a Victorian door knocker than anything off a production line last week. In rooms built around heritage colours, deep greens, warm whites, clay and ochre, it feels as though it was always there. Those pairing warm brass overhead with something at a lower level might find the industrial brass desk lamp a natural companion.
The Rooms It Was Built For
A Victorian terrace hallway with tessellated tile flooring and a narrow ceiling that has never had more than the plainest white bowl fitting: this light changes that entirely. The aged brass and clear glass belong in that hallway as naturally as the ironwork on the front door. A low-ceilinged kitchen in a cottage where the charm of the space has always been let down by the utilitarian ceiling fitting. A landing where matching wall lights from the same collection will run alongside. For ideas on approaching a narrow hallway with considered lighting that transforms the mood without compromising the height, this guide to brightening a narrow dark hallway covers the key principles.
Check These Before You Buy
- Bulb not included , E27 screw cap required. E27 screw cap, 10W LED maximum, sold separately. A warm filament at 2700K glows amber through clear glass in an aged brass frame and gives the lantern its character. A cool white above 4000K loses the warmth of the brass entirely.
- Class 1 wiring , earth wire required. Class 1 means a dedicated earth wire must be present in the ceiling circuit. Most UK homes wired after 1966 will have this. Older wiring should be confirmed before ordering.
- Dimmable with a compatible trailing-edge switch. Full dimming range only with a compatible trailing-edge dimmer installed. A standard on/off switch gives full brightness only.
Specifications
Delivery & Returns
Delivery
| Service | Timescale | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | 3-5 working days | Free |
| Next working day | Order before 4pm | £5.95 |
UK mainland only. Orders placed on weekends or bank holidays are dispatched the next working day.
We are unable to deliver to Northern Ireland, the Scottish Isles, Jersey, Guernsey, the Isle of Wight, the Isle of Man, or the Isles of Scilly. Full delivery information.
Returns
28-day returns policy. Contact us within 28 days of receipt if you are not happy with your order.
Items must be returned unused and in their original packaging. Our UK-based team will guide you through the process. Full returns information.
FAQs
Brass Lantern Flush Light: Your Questions
The tall, narrow profile gives this fitting its lantern character. Most flush fittings are wide and flat, designed to minimise presence. This one does the opposite, bringing the proportions of a wall lantern to the ceiling: distinctive where a plain dome has always been a missed opportunity.
Not at all. Polished brass is bright and yellow. Aged brass is brushed and darkened, closer to original door furniture than anything freshly plated. In a period home it looks as though it was always there.
No bulb included. E27 screw cap, 10W LED maximum. Warm filament at 2700K: through clear glass in an aged brass frame it glows amber and the fitting looks like a lit lantern. Cool white above 4000K removes the brass warmth entirely.
Yes. Full dimming range with a compatible trailing-edge dimmer installed. Bright when the space needs to be functional, lower and warmer in the evening. A standard on/off switch gives full brightness only, so plan for the dimmer at the same time as the fitting.
Best in rooms with warmth and material honesty: original features, warm timber, heritage paints. In a period home it is entirely at home; in a modern interior with a warm palette it fits well. In a cool chrome-and-grey scheme it would look out of place.
Yes. Class 1 means a dedicated earth wire must be present in the circuit. Most UK homes wired after 1966 have this as standard. Older wiring should be confirmed by a qualified person before installation.
Yes. Matching items in the same aged brass and clear glass are available from the same collection, so a hallway or landing can carry the same design language from ceiling to walls. Those wanting a warm-toned companion at table height might also consider the classic glass touch table lamp.
Yes. Flush mounting means no headroom is lost. The tall, narrow profile gives a hallway actual presence rather than a plain bowl, which makes a real difference to how a narrow space feels. Aged brass and clear glass read well against tiled floors and painted walls.
IP20 means no moisture protection. Suitable for dry rooms: hallways, kitchens away from steam, living rooms, bedrooms and landings. Not for bathrooms or steam-exposed positions, where IP44 or higher is required.
Knowledge Hub
Lighting a Home With History
Period homes, original features and heritage schemes ask more of a ceiling fitting than a plain white dome can give. These guides cover how warm metal finishes, considered bulb choices and layered light sources work together in the rooms where it matters most.
Brass Glass Panel Flush Ceiling Light
Overview
Description
Specifications
Delivery & Returns
FAQs
Knowledge Hub
A Lantern on the Ceiling.
Take the proportions of a heritage wall lantern, the tall, slender form, clear glass panels in a warm metal frame, aged brass that belongs in a room rather than just completing a circuit, and bring them to the ceiling without the pendant drop. The brushed aged brass frame holds clear glass panels that keep the bulb visible and the light unfiltered, sitting against the ceiling rose with the confidence of a fitting that was chosen for the room. Dimmable with a compatible switch. One E27 bulb required, sold separately. Matching items available.
Tall, Narrow, and Intentional.
- Profile: Tall and narrow, 335mm deep, 170mm across, a lantern silhouette rather than a flat dome.
- Frame: Brushed aged brass steel, warm and settled rather than polished bright.
- Glass: Clear panels, untinted and unfrosted, keeping the light output full and the bulb visible.
- Bulb: E27 screw cap, 10W LED maximum, sold separately; warm filament at 2700K strongly recommended.
- Dimmable: Yes, with a compatible trailing-edge dimmer switch; Class 1, earth wire required, 220-240V.
- IP rating: IP20, dry interior spaces only.
Rooms With a Sense of History
Period hallways, cottage kitchens, Victorian terrace landings where a pendant has never been an option: this fitting belongs in all of them. Aged brass and clear glass is a combination domestic lighting has used for generations in wall lanterns and outdoor fittings, and it translates to the ceiling with the same appropriate quality. Matching wall lights are available in the same collection. For ideas on how warm metals and considered light sources build a genuinely welcoming space, the industrial living room design guide covers the principles clearly.
Not a Dome. A Lantern.
There is a shape in domestic lighting trusted for centuries: the lantern. A frame of warm metal. Clear glass panels. A form that looks like an architectural object rather than a functional fitting. This brass glass panel flush ceiling light is that shape, brought to the ceiling in a tall, slender profile that keeps every centimetre of headroom intact while arriving with real presence. The frame is finished in brushed aged brass, not polished bright or gold but the quieter, slightly darkened warmth of brass that has earned its tone over time.
The result is a flush fitting with the visual presence of a pendant lantern. Where a flat dome tries to go unnoticed, this one arrives with a settled verticality that gives a hallway, a kitchen or a low-ceilinged room a ceiling light that actually looks as though it belongs there on purpose. Matching items from the same collection can extend the aged brass and glass language to a wall light or table lamp in the same space.
What a Lantern Gives a Room
- Visual presence without pendant drop. The tall, narrow silhouette creates architectural interest overhead without hanging below the ceiling the way a pendant does, keeping headroom intact.
- Aged brass that belongs in a period or warm-palette room. Quieter and more settled than polished brass, closer to original ironmongery in a Victorian terrace than anything freshly plated. Heritage paint colours, warm stone and natural timber find this finish entirely at home.
- Clear glass that lets the light travel freely. Plain, untinted, unfrosted glass: a warm filament E27 visible through clear glass in an aged brass frame looks like a lit object rather than a covered bulb.
- Matching items for a co-ordinated scheme. Matching wall lights are available in the same collection. Where ceiling and wall lights share a family, the scheme feels intentional in a way mismatched fittings never achieve.
- Dimmable for rooms that need more than one setting. With a compatible trailing-edge dimmer, it moves from the practical brightness of a working kitchen to the lower warmth of an evening hallway.
- Suitable for the rooms where choices feel most limited. Low-ceilinged hallways, Victorian landings, small kitchens with no room for a pendant: the spaces where most fittings disappoint are where this one earns its keep.
What Aged Brass Actually Looks Like
Polished brass announces itself in a room with the confidence of something recently cleaned. Aged brass does the opposite. The brushed surface removes the sheen and the ageing process introduces a slightly darkened, warm tone closer to a Victorian door knocker than anything off a production line last week. In rooms built around heritage colours, deep greens, warm whites, clay and ochre, it feels as though it was always there. Those pairing warm brass overhead with something at a lower level might find the industrial brass desk lamp a natural companion.
The Rooms It Was Built For
A Victorian terrace hallway with tessellated tile flooring and a narrow ceiling that has never had more than the plainest white bowl fitting: this light changes that entirely. The aged brass and clear glass belong in that hallway as naturally as the ironwork on the front door. A low-ceilinged kitchen in a cottage where the charm of the space has always been let down by the utilitarian ceiling fitting. A landing where matching wall lights from the same collection will run alongside. For ideas on approaching a narrow hallway with considered lighting that transforms the mood without compromising the height, this guide to brightening a narrow dark hallway covers the key principles.
Check These Before You Buy
- Bulb not included , E27 screw cap required. E27 screw cap, 10W LED maximum, sold separately. A warm filament at 2700K glows amber through clear glass in an aged brass frame and gives the lantern its character. A cool white above 4000K loses the warmth of the brass entirely.
- Class 1 wiring , earth wire required. Class 1 means a dedicated earth wire must be present in the ceiling circuit. Most UK homes wired after 1966 will have this. Older wiring should be confirmed before ordering.
- Dimmable with a compatible trailing-edge switch. Full dimming range only with a compatible trailing-edge dimmer installed. A standard on/off switch gives full brightness only.
Delivery
| Service | Timescale | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | 3-5 working days | Free |
| Next working day | Order before 4pm | £5.95 |
UK mainland only. Orders placed on weekends or bank holidays are dispatched the next working day.
We are unable to deliver to Northern Ireland, the Scottish Isles, Jersey, Guernsey, the Isle of Wight, the Isle of Man, or the Isles of Scilly. Full delivery information.
Returns
28-day returns policy. Contact us within 28 days of receipt if you are not happy with your order.
Items must be returned unused and in their original packaging. Our UK-based team will guide you through the process. Full returns information.
Brass Lantern Flush Light: Your Questions
The tall, narrow profile gives this fitting its lantern character. Most flush fittings are wide and flat, designed to minimise presence. This one does the opposite, bringing the proportions of a wall lantern to the ceiling: distinctive where a plain dome has always been a missed opportunity.
Not at all. Polished brass is bright and yellow. Aged brass is brushed and darkened, closer to original door furniture than anything freshly plated. In a period home it looks as though it was always there.
No bulb included. E27 screw cap, 10W LED maximum. Warm filament at 2700K: through clear glass in an aged brass frame it glows amber and the fitting looks like a lit lantern. Cool white above 4000K removes the brass warmth entirely.
Yes. Full dimming range with a compatible trailing-edge dimmer installed. Bright when the space needs to be functional, lower and warmer in the evening. A standard on/off switch gives full brightness only, so plan for the dimmer at the same time as the fitting.
Best in rooms with warmth and material honesty: original features, warm timber, heritage paints. In a period home it is entirely at home; in a modern interior with a warm palette it fits well. In a cool chrome-and-grey scheme it would look out of place.
Yes. Class 1 means a dedicated earth wire must be present in the circuit. Most UK homes wired after 1966 have this as standard. Older wiring should be confirmed by a qualified person before installation.
Yes. Matching items in the same aged brass and clear glass are available from the same collection, so a hallway or landing can carry the same design language from ceiling to walls. Those wanting a warm-toned companion at table height might also consider the classic glass touch table lamp.
Yes. Flush mounting means no headroom is lost. The tall, narrow profile gives a hallway actual presence rather than a plain bowl, which makes a real difference to how a narrow space feels. Aged brass and clear glass read well against tiled floors and painted walls.
IP20 means no moisture protection. Suitable for dry rooms: hallways, kitchens away from steam, living rooms, bedrooms and landings. Not for bathrooms or steam-exposed positions, where IP44 or higher is required.
Lighting a Home With History
Period homes, original features and heritage schemes ask more of a ceiling fitting than a plain white dome can give. These guides cover how warm metal finishes, considered bulb choices and layered light sources work together in the rooms where it matters most.
Overview
A Lantern on the Ceiling.
Take the proportions of a heritage wall lantern, the tall, slender form, clear glass panels in a warm metal frame, aged brass that belongs in a room rather than just completing a circuit, and bring them to the ceiling without the pendant drop. The brushed aged brass frame holds clear glass panels that keep the bulb visible and the light unfiltered, sitting against the ceiling rose with the confidence of a fitting that was chosen for the room. Dimmable with a compatible switch. One E27 bulb required, sold separately. Matching items available.
Tall, Narrow, and Intentional.
- Profile: Tall and narrow, 335mm deep, 170mm across, a lantern silhouette rather than a flat dome.
- Frame: Brushed aged brass steel, warm and settled rather than polished bright.
- Glass: Clear panels, untinted and unfrosted, keeping the light output full and the bulb visible.
- Bulb: E27 screw cap, 10W LED maximum, sold separately; warm filament at 2700K strongly recommended.
- Dimmable: Yes, with a compatible trailing-edge dimmer switch; Class 1, earth wire required, 220-240V.
- IP rating: IP20, dry interior spaces only.
Rooms With a Sense of History
Period hallways, cottage kitchens, Victorian terrace landings where a pendant has never been an option: this fitting belongs in all of them. Aged brass and clear glass is a combination domestic lighting has used for generations in wall lanterns and outdoor fittings, and it translates to the ceiling with the same appropriate quality. Matching wall lights are available in the same collection. For ideas on how warm metals and considered light sources build a genuinely welcoming space, the industrial living room design guide covers the principles clearly.
Description
Not a Dome. A Lantern.
There is a shape in domestic lighting trusted for centuries: the lantern. A frame of warm metal. Clear glass panels. A form that looks like an architectural object rather than a functional fitting. This brass glass panel flush ceiling light is that shape, brought to the ceiling in a tall, slender profile that keeps every centimetre of headroom intact while arriving with real presence. The frame is finished in brushed aged brass, not polished bright or gold but the quieter, slightly darkened warmth of brass that has earned its tone over time.
The result is a flush fitting with the visual presence of a pendant lantern. Where a flat dome tries to go unnoticed, this one arrives with a settled verticality that gives a hallway, a kitchen or a low-ceilinged room a ceiling light that actually looks as though it belongs there on purpose. Matching items from the same collection can extend the aged brass and glass language to a wall light or table lamp in the same space.
What a Lantern Gives a Room
- Visual presence without pendant drop. The tall, narrow silhouette creates architectural interest overhead without hanging below the ceiling the way a pendant does, keeping headroom intact.
- Aged brass that belongs in a period or warm-palette room. Quieter and more settled than polished brass, closer to original ironmongery in a Victorian terrace than anything freshly plated. Heritage paint colours, warm stone and natural timber find this finish entirely at home.
- Clear glass that lets the light travel freely. Plain, untinted, unfrosted glass: a warm filament E27 visible through clear glass in an aged brass frame looks like a lit object rather than a covered bulb.
- Matching items for a co-ordinated scheme. Matching wall lights are available in the same collection. Where ceiling and wall lights share a family, the scheme feels intentional in a way mismatched fittings never achieve.
- Dimmable for rooms that need more than one setting. With a compatible trailing-edge dimmer, it moves from the practical brightness of a working kitchen to the lower warmth of an evening hallway.
- Suitable for the rooms where choices feel most limited. Low-ceilinged hallways, Victorian landings, small kitchens with no room for a pendant: the spaces where most fittings disappoint are where this one earns its keep.
What Aged Brass Actually Looks Like
Polished brass announces itself in a room with the confidence of something recently cleaned. Aged brass does the opposite. The brushed surface removes the sheen and the ageing process introduces a slightly darkened, warm tone closer to a Victorian door knocker than anything off a production line last week. In rooms built around heritage colours, deep greens, warm whites, clay and ochre, it feels as though it was always there. Those pairing warm brass overhead with something at a lower level might find the industrial brass desk lamp a natural companion.
The Rooms It Was Built For
A Victorian terrace hallway with tessellated tile flooring and a narrow ceiling that has never had more than the plainest white bowl fitting: this light changes that entirely. The aged brass and clear glass belong in that hallway as naturally as the ironwork on the front door. A low-ceilinged kitchen in a cottage where the charm of the space has always been let down by the utilitarian ceiling fitting. A landing where matching wall lights from the same collection will run alongside. For ideas on approaching a narrow hallway with considered lighting that transforms the mood without compromising the height, this guide to brightening a narrow dark hallway covers the key principles.
Check These Before You Buy
- Bulb not included , E27 screw cap required. E27 screw cap, 10W LED maximum, sold separately. A warm filament at 2700K glows amber through clear glass in an aged brass frame and gives the lantern its character. A cool white above 4000K loses the warmth of the brass entirely.
- Class 1 wiring , earth wire required. Class 1 means a dedicated earth wire must be present in the ceiling circuit. Most UK homes wired after 1966 will have this. Older wiring should be confirmed before ordering.
- Dimmable with a compatible trailing-edge switch. Full dimming range only with a compatible trailing-edge dimmer installed. A standard on/off switch gives full brightness only.
Specifications
Delivery & Returns
Delivery
| Service | Timescale | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | 3-5 working days | Free |
| Next working day | Order before 4pm | £5.95 |
UK mainland only. Orders placed on weekends or bank holidays are dispatched the next working day.
We are unable to deliver to Northern Ireland, the Scottish Isles, Jersey, Guernsey, the Isle of Wight, the Isle of Man, or the Isles of Scilly. Full delivery information.
Returns
28-day returns policy. Contact us within 28 days of receipt if you are not happy with your order.
Items must be returned unused and in their original packaging. Our UK-based team will guide you through the process. Full returns information.
FAQs
Brass Lantern Flush Light: Your Questions
The tall, narrow profile gives this fitting its lantern character. Most flush fittings are wide and flat, designed to minimise presence. This one does the opposite, bringing the proportions of a wall lantern to the ceiling: distinctive where a plain dome has always been a missed opportunity.
Not at all. Polished brass is bright and yellow. Aged brass is brushed and darkened, closer to original door furniture than anything freshly plated. In a period home it looks as though it was always there.
No bulb included. E27 screw cap, 10W LED maximum. Warm filament at 2700K: through clear glass in an aged brass frame it glows amber and the fitting looks like a lit lantern. Cool white above 4000K removes the brass warmth entirely.
Yes. Full dimming range with a compatible trailing-edge dimmer installed. Bright when the space needs to be functional, lower and warmer in the evening. A standard on/off switch gives full brightness only, so plan for the dimmer at the same time as the fitting.
Best in rooms with warmth and material honesty: original features, warm timber, heritage paints. In a period home it is entirely at home; in a modern interior with a warm palette it fits well. In a cool chrome-and-grey scheme it would look out of place.
Yes. Class 1 means a dedicated earth wire must be present in the circuit. Most UK homes wired after 1966 have this as standard. Older wiring should be confirmed by a qualified person before installation.
Yes. Matching items in the same aged brass and clear glass are available from the same collection, so a hallway or landing can carry the same design language from ceiling to walls. Those wanting a warm-toned companion at table height might also consider the classic glass touch table lamp.
Yes. Flush mounting means no headroom is lost. The tall, narrow profile gives a hallway actual presence rather than a plain bowl, which makes a real difference to how a narrow space feels. Aged brass and clear glass read well against tiled floors and painted walls.
IP20 means no moisture protection. Suitable for dry rooms: hallways, kitchens away from steam, living rooms, bedrooms and landings. Not for bathrooms or steam-exposed positions, where IP44 or higher is required.
Knowledge Hub
Lighting a Home With History
Period homes, original features and heritage schemes ask more of a ceiling fitting than a plain white dome can give. These guides cover how warm metal finishes, considered bulb choices and layered light sources work together in the rooms where it matters most.