HomeLifestyleDécor experts’ advice on how to use structural lamps in living spaces will put the spotlight on your taste

Décor experts’ advice on how to use structural lamps in living spaces will put the spotlight on your taste

Living room lighting trends: Structural lamps are no longer supporting characters in décor but they are evolving as protagonists, shaping the atmosphere and personality of a home. They don’t just light up rooms; they illuminate the evolving story of contemporary living.

November 05, 2025 / 08:01 IST
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Home lighting trends: Designers are celebrating fluid forms and asymmetry, favouring materials that feel authentic and tactile (Image: Intent Made and Yaahvi)
Home lighting trends: Designers are celebrating fluid forms and asymmetry, favouring materials that feel authentic and tactile (Image: Intent Made and Yaahvi)

From whimsical, hand-formed bases to fluid silhouettes inspired by movement in nature, lamps are now storytellers within interiors. Whether placed on a side table or suspended dramatically above a dining space, they bring depth and intimacy to modern homes.

A lamp isn’t just a light source anymore; it becomes part of the story of the room and makes it more alive, feels Swetha Vegesana, Founder of Intent Made. She says, “What’s exciting right now is how lighting is moving beyond just function. Designers are really embracing sculptural and organic forms, shapes inspired by nature, like petals, branches, or flowing water. It’s about creating pieces that feel alive, that have personality in a space.”

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Sculptural lighting:

Sculptural and organic lighting pieces, often shaped by hand rather than mass-produced, are leading this transformation. Designers are celebrating fluid forms and asymmetry, favouring materials that feel authentic and tactile. Says Nikta Bansal, Founder of Yaahvi, “We see lighting as art that illuminates emotion as much as space. For 2025, the strongest direction in lighting design is the embrace of sculptural and organic forms — fluid silhouettes, natural textures, and materials that feel alive. Designers are moving away from rigid geometry and symmetry toward more free-flowing, imperfect, and tactile designs inspired by nature.”