The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

LIGHT TOUCH

Rooms can be made to feel bigger and brighter by making simple changes. We have compiled our top five techniques

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Light your home the natural way with windows, mirrors and paint.

If you have a room that lacks natural light, don’t despair – there are lots of ways to make it lighter and brighter: 1. Any room can be made to feel lighter simply by painting the ceiling white, so it reflects light instead of absorbing it, and, of course, the walls too.

Specialist emulsions can help even more. Dulux Ultra White Matt emulsion (from £24.98 for 2.5ltr, www.dulux. co.uk) is not only a really bright white (unlike most pure brilliant white emulsions, which are off-white), it’s also 20 times tougher than standard Dulux emulsion.

Ultra White contains special lightrefle­ctive particles that reflect up to twice as much light back into the room as standard Dulux emulsion.

For soft, subtle colours, try Dulux Light + Space Matt emulsions (from £20.99 for 2.5ltr), which contain the same lightrefle­ctive particles.

North-facing rooms are most challengin­g to decorate because the natural light they receive is normally cold. For this reason, avoid cold colours and stick to warm ones, such as yellows and creamy neutrals.

2. One of the best ways to brighten up a kitchen is with pale – preferably white – high-gloss unit doors, as these bounce light around the room.

High-gloss kitchens never seem to go out of fashion, so glossy doors are a great way to update the room and needn’t be expensive. In any dark room, but especially kitchens and bathrooms, it’s important to have good artificial lighting because you may need it on when it’s light outside.

3. In other rooms, consider going for glossy or mirrored furniture. Hanging mirrors on the walls opposite a window will maximise the light coming in and make the room feel bigger. And don’t forget the floor – white-painted floorboard­s, or shiny white floor tiles in kitchens and bathrooms, will help to bounce light around.

4. Replacing, enlarging or adding windows can make a big difference to how light a room is, but it’s an expensive and disruptive solution to the problem, and planning regulation­s can often restrict what you do.

Changing the window treatment is usually much cheaper – swap fussy curtains for sleek roller blinds, for example, and you’ll let in more light.

5. Another radical solution is to remove a wall. Knocking two rooms into one usually gives the new room more windows and it may get sunlight for most of the day if, say, it’s now both east facing (morning sun) and west facing (evening sun).

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